By LARRY COLLINS Canadian' Press Staff Writer REGINA (CP) -- W. S. (BilD Hawrylak is a top man in his profession but he is probably better known for his hobby. A teacher of mathematics by day, he spends his evenings keep- ing' statistics for the Western In- terprovincial Football Union. a Regina School Teacher Football Statistician tics. Now he is head of the math- Hawrylak believes they hrewd stud ematics department in a city high school. One new studeht asked him at the beginning of a term if he were "any relation to the Bill Hawylak who keeps foot- ball statistics?' Bill's five official scorers are Bill O'Neill, an employee of Man- itoba Pool Elevators, in Winni- peg; Hank Johnson, football make d lv of his statistics. And he feels that 99 times out of 100 the statistics, taken com- letely, tell an accurate story of he game. "Sometimes a fan will wonder why his team lost when it out- rushed the opposition," he says. "But he may forget that his team made five fumbles and lost four CRU Secretary Has Short Tale TORONTO (CP) -- Harry Me- Brien, secretary of the Canadian Rugby Union and the man in charge of ticket distribution, can't get you into Varsity Stad- ium to see Saturday's Grey Cup final. " He makes this plain with a sign on his hotel - room wall reads: Ich habe keine Gray Cup kar- You have to take a second | Brown wound up atop Billy look perhaps to note the gloves, | 'Spider' Kelly when the lat- before you realize that despite | ter ducked his onrushing op- appearances, these fellows are | ponent ig, their 10-round light- boxers, not wrestlers. Jimmy |, weight bout in Belfast, Ireland, CAMERA CATCHES BOXERS WRESTLING | on Saturday night. Kelly, for- | mer Empire title-holder, man- | aged to get oni from under and | win a close decision. | --AP Wirephoto job that has made him known in oints as widely separated as itehorse, Y.T., and Marville, France, It also brings him queries from obscure Prairie towns, as well as telephone calls from late - night revellers who want to settle a bet. Since the WIFU started keep- ing statistics in 1950, Bill Hawry- lak has been its chief statistician. This means he spends most of his spare time compiling figures sent to him each weekend by the five scorers in WIFU cities, KNOWN TO MANY A husky six-footer who has played =m--t sports, including football, Hawrylak says he de- cided to be a school teacher while he was #1. public school and has never regretted the decision, partly because it gives him time for such things as football statis- writer for the Regina Leader- Post; Greg Fulton of Calgary, who works for the Income Tax department; Herb McLachlin, a physical edueation instructor at the University of Alberta in Ed- monton, and Alex Donaldson of Vancouver an estimator with a printing firm. Their methods are as varied as their jobs. While Johnson does the scoring from his press box perch, Fulton, says Hawrylak, will don a uniform and gallop up and down the sidelines, notebook {in hand. But all are dedicated to football, The scoring results are ress] to Hawrylak who gets out a press release early each week. He |as cautious zs an accountant. | FIGURES TELL STORY Although some coaches deny ft, ten No tengo de boletos Grey Cup Pas de billets Grey Cup Non offrire bollettine Grey Cup of them--possibly at erucial mo- ments." During the coming winter Haw- lak hopes to complete some lifetime averages for the WIFU's In any lan, three great rushers who, he sug- Y mguage~ No Grey Cup tickets. BE==MBER WHEN...? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Balmy Beach, the On- tario rugby football union cham- pions, beat Hamilton Tigers of the Big Four 8-5 in the eastern final 27 years ago today. Balmy Beach then ed Regina Rough- riders 11-6 in Grey Cup final. Woman Angler Has New World Record NEW YORK (AP) -- Amelia Ballance's catch of a 63-pound channel bass has been recognized as a women's all-tackle world record, the International Game Fish Association said Wednes- Miss Ballance, a veteran ang- ler from Buxton, N.D., landed the fish last Oct. 31 on the beach at Cape Hatteras, N.C., in 12 min- i TORONTO (CP)--The Football Reporters of Canada was formed Thursday at a meeting of foot- ball writers and sportscasters here for the Grey Cup game. Gord Walker of the To onio Sloe and Mail was elected pres- ent. Bob Moir of CBC Winnipeg named secretary-treasurer sa'd the aims of *ne organization in- clude the tightening of veting re- gulations for all-star teams and popular player awards and the regulating of space in press boxes. utes. She used a line testing 20.4 pounds, placing the catch in the 30-pound line test class. She thus set a world record for both men' and women in the 30:pound line class. : 3 gests, are Normie Kwong and Johnny Bright of Edmonton, and Gerry James of Winnipeg. Earlier this year he made some comparisons between two all-time reat passers -- Jack Jacobs of Winnipeg and Frank Tripucka of Saskatchewan Roughriders, Over a five-year period, Jacobs completed 53.3 per cent of 1,330 passes thrown, and Tripucka completed 57 per cent of 1,308. But 104 of Jacobs' passes went for touchdowns, compared with 59 for Tripucka. In 1952, Jacobs tossed a record 34 touchdown passes. Veteran Grid Official SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "Everything From Soup To Nuts" THE SCHENLEY football awards, fast becoming one of Can- ada's most coveted sports honors, have been named for the 1957 'season with Edmonton's Jackie Parker chosen the mosi outstand- | ing footballer in the Canadian game and Gerry James of the Wianipeg Blue Bombers voted as the outstanding Canadian home- brew. With all the pre-game ballyhoo for the Grey Cup final, such as the before4he-party dinners and dances, selection of "Miss Grey Cup" and of course the monster parade tomorrow morning, | which is expected to be almost of a two-hour duration, the colorful spectacle of Canada's annual football final certainly gets a buildup that exceeds any other single sports event in the country an comparing favorably with the well-known "bowl games" held on New Year's Day, by our Southern neighbors. | The Blue Bombers arrived yesterday and so did a couple of train-loads of exhuberant Western teams, many from Edmon- | ton, Calgary, Regina, Vancouver, ete., but the majority from | Winnipeg naturally. Today, the Ottawa, Montreal and Hamilton contingents will start arriving. We note individuals are even running newspaper advertisements in quest of Grey Cup tick- their old plays, which "scouts" didn't see in theyrecent Edmon- | ton series, because the Eskimos were already well acquainted with same, Everybody knows the Hamilion Tiger-Cats have shown 'superb skill and strength as a defensive team in this year's Big Four campaign. Last Saturday they uncorked an offensive that still has the fans talking. Those low-scoging playoff games with Edmonton Eskimos seem to prove also that the Blue Bombers are quite a defensive unit but then Gerry James set a scoring record too, so they also have an attack. In what could be a grim battle between two power- packed defensive teams, the element of luck may prove a de- elding factor--certainly there'll be a few fumbles in the heavy Kiwanis jena B'Rith Hayden Macdonald els. Coach Bud Grant hints that the Bombers will use some of |T\ Oshawa Minor Hockey Assoc. Team Standings The following are the League standings of the Oshawa Minor Hockey Association, games up to and including Nov. 28. BANTAM | @ Houdaille Ind. Local 205 Canadian Tire Lo 222 Local 1817 Local 2784 Civitan Police Assoc. MIDGET w & 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 2 2 1 1 0 0 [OY CSRS o CONN RE ooooCoe® Kinsmen Rotary Legion Lions OOO DOoO SONA JUVENILE Beaton's Dairy 2 1 " 1 0 'ony's Oshawa Dairy Canada Goose Almost Down On Football Field AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) -- L. D. |Nuckels, game warden at Cas- Has Grey Cup Memories Br JACK SULLIVAN Joo names and teams for obvious Canadian Press Staff Writer [reasons. TORONTO (CP) -- Grey Cup| 'One captain, a big hulking Jottings: |guy, approached the referee and, Hap Shouldice of Ottawa, for- in most respectful tones, asked merly on the Big Four Union of-|for clarification of the ruling," ficiating staff, recalls one Cup Shouldice recalls. "He stressed final when the referee's call on'he wasn't squawking, he just a play had players of both clubs | wanted to kmow so that when he a trifle perplexed. Shouldice left'went to the bench he wouldn't EC" pnp, (12 THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETTE, Friday, November 29, 1957 Beaton's Dairy Juveniles Take Over League Lead Beaton's and it was a 4-1 game. Cockerton scored the only goal Beaton's Dairy Juveniles took over first place in the Juvenile appear too much of a knothead to his coach, who would want precise ruling on the play. "The big guy was listening in- tently when the captain of the] other club, a much smaller fel- low, approached the referee with the same query. Then the fun started. I "The guy turned around] prodded the little fellow in the] chest and roared: | "Go away, punk. I'm talking] to the organ grinder. He'll talk] to the monkey when I'm fin-| ished." | Then, there's the story of the| American import who ended at| the bottom of a pileup and sud- denly let out a fearful yell "What kind of a league is this?" | he shouted to an official nearby | and showed him an arm, teeth marks most chviocus obvious. LICKED HIS CHOPS "It was easy to spot the biter," Shouldice says. "He was stand-| ing around listening and with an| angelic expression on his face. | He was also licking his chops." Just about everybody in this| slightly mad football city is| agreed that Saturday's game will be a tough, bruising affair be- tween two sock-'em, rock-'em clubs. It is shaping up as one of he most bitterly-fought Cana- dian champion games in years. Hamilton Tiger-Cats were the| lowest scorers in the 14-game Big | Four schedule with 250 and had | the fewest scored against them, | 189. Winnipeg allowed Ed ton | SHIN.-PADS - - HOCKEY STICKS of the third period, un OSHAWA DAIRY AND H. MACDONALD section of the Oshawa Minor| Hockey Association Wednesday night, when they downed the powerhil Tony's entry by the Jackie Sneddon made his re- gi 5) okerton paced the|turn to the Oshawa Minor Hock- Dairy club to their win with two|Y ASSOC TAME, ong hs au goals, and the win for Beaton's |p = three. goals to pace his (was their second in as many gauden Macdonald club to a 52 games. Eskimos only 14 points in their three-game Western Conference finals, They'll go into the game all| square. In 1985, the westerners] beat Hamilton 18-12 at Hamilton | for the West's first Grey Cup vie-| GIFTS HOCKEY GLOVES SHOULDER HARNESS 4.25 - 12.50 2.29-4.95-6.95 --- 185-799 = - « 89.275 HOCKEY SKATES - --898-14.98 WHITE ELK FIGURE SKATES AT SAY... Z8 And Many Other Fine Christmas Gift Suggestions Customer Parking Across From Store OPEN UNTIL 6 P.M. DAILY FRIDAY NIGHTS TILL 9 P.M. KENT'S In other games, Hayden Mac- win over Oshawa Dairy Ju- veniles. donald Juveniles won over O, awa Dairy by the score of 5-2, while in an exhibition tilt Cana- {dian Legion edged the Bantam | All-Stars 2-1. BEATON'S DAIRY Hayden Macdonald led 4-0 at {the end of the first period, and 5-2 at the end of the second. There was no scoring in the last stanza, tory and in 1953 Tiger-Cats edged | the Bombers 12-6. That gives them 24 points each in two games, a pretty good in.| dication that when these two teams. get together the head- knocking can be fierce. : WESTERN TIRE 74 CELINA 'ST. PHONE RA 5.7261 EE aa: TCEREE EE a 17ST ESR HER |troville, Tex., tells a story about a Canada goose that apparently| AND TONY'S Besides Sneddon's three goals, other marksmen for the winners |were, Palmer and Boisson. Col- {vin and Lounds blinked the light . \for 'Oshawa Dairy. . Leon gv EXTRA! EXTRA! Read All The News Of made by Jack Kent Cooke, owner of Toronto Maple Leafs Base-|football game at . Castroville.|of the first period on a goal by In a close fought exhibition tilt, . . . Oshawa and District in the 0 Club, w! i scope fo enable. Toronto. to. gperate. & Major league bascball pass at the playing ied Coming he esing maimtin of the soc. Canaan Legion Mideels 'eoged I . DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE ...IT HAS EVERYTHING! franchise at this site. . . . OSHAWA UMPIRES' Assoc. members as low as 25 or 30 feet. lond stanza on a pass from Wills, |the Bantam All-Stars by the score are reminded that Pres. Jack Hobbs has called his "payday On the last two times the be- then Wills blinked the light tolof 2-1. | ® Complete Local News © World-Wide Coverage meeting" for Eastview Park clubhouse, ten o'clock Sunday morn- wildered bird appeared about to|give the Beaton's team a 3-0| Crevier and Woods scored the in take a landing among the foot- lead. | goals for the winners, while Buch- * ® Sports Section . ® Full Page Of Comics Cahadia ¥ 4 | ball players. However, he ap-| Tony's bounced back, and after ler notched the lone marker for adian hockey tour, when they defeated Sudbury Wolves 7-4| arently" decided against becom. some close calls around the net,|the Bantam All-Stars . «| . NN Features For All The Family ® Advertisements / going and they may prove extremely costly, That's what "killed" the Eskimos im overtime, remember? | wanted to pldy football. | | Paced by Domry Cooserion. the BRIGHT BITS: --Toronto's parks committee has decided to = uokels Yeporced headarars |Beaton's Dairy Juveniles scored delay action on the plan to enlarge the CNE Grandstand to make | g a 51 win over Tony's in an at- i i 1%® ers here that the goose flew into traction at the Children's Arena. It a new sports stadium and one of the reasons is the protest being the bright lights at a recent night | ners led 10 at the end E548: "Qian Ki» last night. . . . CHARLIE PEACOCK'S Oshawa rink won their ; i Mi i jan Le; A 3 ing a 12th man for either squad|Middleton scored from Nichol-| Canadian Legion led 1-0 at the] oe two rounds in the Thauburn Bonspiel play at Toronto High |and- disappeared into the dark-|ishen. However before the end of end of the first, 2-1 at the end ark Curling Club yesterday. | ness. Ithe period, Landry scored foriof the second. | Unbrd of Esoromy 8 Vake in the SCOTSMAN NNR ZZ] \ FOR DELIVERY TO YOUR HOME Phone the Circulation Dept. CANADA'S LOWEST PRICED FULL-SIZED CAR DRAMATIC NEW STYLING IN OTHER EXC TING MODELS PRICED FAR BELOW ALL COMPETITIVE MODELS This is the 6-passenger economy car that has everything! Crisp, clean design with new lower Flightstream roof line . . . full size ... full power . . . full comfort . . . plus astonishing savings. Yow save when you buy at the Scotsman's amazingly low price. 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