MINOR BASKETBALL Two Close Games In Opening Round [jp Fight The first round in the Y's| Men's minor basketball playoffs | were played this morning | with|effort by Davies 2. Coach -- Walt Bathe. The Police Squad, led in a fine Wes Misiaszek, out- played their rivals for the whole Davey Moore ! Breaks Jaw By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer Are male figure skaters merely {ballet artists who must have their private instructors along, plus | CARACAS, Venezuela (AP)--A little - known Venezuelan fighter broke world fea'herweight cham- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Merch 16 1960 15 Canada's Figure Skaters Get Chance To Prove Rank "Very interesting," chuckled {Nigel Stephens of Toronto, Cana- |dian figure-skating champion in {1945 and now first vice-president {of the Canadian Amateur Figure- two very close games resulting. | The St. John's Cadets are lead-|game but couldn't seem to drop ing CKLB by one point by virtue|the important shots through the of a 45-44 game. Later the Jay-|hoop. The Jaycee on the other cee Whites played a fired-up Po-{hand played very fine ball and| lice Squad and only managed to|took quick advantage of all scor-| emerge with a three point edge|ing opportunities to eke through winning 35-32. Both of these games|with a three-point edge going into are the first of a two game total |the second and final game. Roger {point playoff. {Reeson kept pace with Misiaszek The CKLB squad, led by rapid in scoring, each leading their |shooting Jerry Bourdage, quickly team with 13 and 14 respectively. took the lead in this game and|Stan Seneco was the main differ- pion Davey Moore's jaw and forced the Spr in gfield, Ohio, scrapper to leave the ring Mon- day night in the seventh round of a scheduled 10-round non - title bout. Young Carlos Hernandez rocked Moore with a hard right in the third round and sent him down for a six-count. Moore clinched and waited for the bell. It ap- peared it was the third-round their mothers to blow their| Skating Association. noses? Are the modern pro foot- ball players, particularly Toronto {Argenauts, a pampered lot? The answer is an unqualified yes, if you listen to Art Devlin, an American ski jumper, who {watched the ice docdlers at last month's Winter Olympic Games, and Teddy Morris, chief scout in charge of Canadian talent for the Big Four football club. sport, I'd just like to see Mr. ing performance, or possibly even would see whether we are ath letes or not." Betty Oliphant of Torounto, bal- let mistress of the National Ballet of Canada, was much more out- spoken. "I respeci everybody else's Devlin do a five-minute free-skat- become a figure skater. Then he at the half way point led 26-17. : 's were not to be de-| nied in the last half as they tied he game at 32-32 by the end of he third quarter. The last quarter and the one-point lead came ence playing a fine offensive game. This two-game total-point series will be finished this Satur- day at 10.15. JAYCEE WHITES i3, Goodman 3, Burnett, Reeson Sara- Devlin, a one-time U.S, and North American titleholder, prob- ably got out of his depth when he blow that fractured Moore's jaw. | In the fourth round, Moore |went down again. After that he!made the statements about the |carefully guarded his face. {figure skaters. Speaking at Lake Hernandez peppered blows at Placid, N.Y., he said also that he him in the seventh. A hard right|didn't feel they were athletes in "That's * an ignorant remark from a top athlete, isn't it?" she exclaimed. "1 can't see why he would bring ballet dancers into this. But if he thinks that our dancers aren't athletic, I'd like to put him in a class for a month |technique of ballet js tremend. {ously athletic. uf ) month." Morris blew the whistle on Ar- gonauts a speech to the Toronto Board of Trade. He cited the case of '"'that dilly we brought in from the U.S. a |couple of years ago" who, refus- ing to shower with the rest of the team, donned Bermuda shorts and walked home to bathe. He said Argonauts' new $25,000 dressing rooms contain steam rooms, short - wave radio, sun lamps, "so they'll have that out- door look when they go out on |the field," and a bathtub "I've |never seen anybody use." | "They got this whirlpool bath, and these s dip their elbows into it, or their big toes. And the medical room . , . you should see the white tape . , . Some of those dillies go out on the field taped from top to bottom. No wonder they can't get in the playoffs-- they can't move." think he'd last a Argos haven't hit the Big Four when, in an effort to halt the St.\mack 5, Kurhan 4, Seneco 10 and| v playoffs since 1955, John's attack, the CKLB team|Le Blanc. Coach Bob made the final difference. St.|dard. John's Marcis Esmits played a| poLICE ASSOCIATION very fine game netting a total of|Byrke 11, Misiaszek 14, Rowden! 22 for his squad. This series will _|to the chin sent the champion to|the accepted sense of the word. {the canvas. Moore tried to hang| Reaction of the skaters and of- on by clinching, but when theificials wasn't an explosive as referce separated the fighters, people would expect. They simply . : the American retired to his cor-ltold the 38-year-old Devlin who 2, Lindsay 3, Anderson, Bombino,| per, He sat down, both his cheeks served as a television commenta- and he would find out that the i] B.C ing the Canadian basketball Ron Bi > championships clamps Bob | {.ials in Montreal. Both boys of J\lbern a head-igock on and Olympic | ROUGHHOUSE CAGE ACTION fouls. Alberni defeated finals. Ford of Montreal 1Juskies dur- | later were ejected for too many Tony's Must Halt Belko's Ace Lin 16 10 13 0 4:00 0 10:00 If Tony's Refreshrn ents are en- Melnick, Tony's tertsiniie any thous ats ol cap-iNjcholishen, Gdm's turing their Secon successive 5 . UAW Hockey league title Robinson, Gdm's must stop Belko Retly-Mix's top|" attacking unit of Jack Armstrong, George Westfall and {Syd Arnold. That's the way Ton mentor | "Rab" Reid sees it Last Sunday, this tr io did most of the damage as the «Cementmen romped to a one-sick:d 10-1 tri umph to open up the best-of-five] final series The big line has really been clicking during the} playoffs, having pick=ed up 31} points in the semi-fin al against] Goodman Plumbers and adding 17 against Tony's in the key win.| The trio are no stran gers when it comes to picking uv p scoring points, as all have OF [A experi-| ence. Armstrong, the 1i'ne"s pivot is a journeyman, hawing toiled as a junior with Waterloo, Osh- awa, St. Catharines amd Quebec they Wpstor-works. 94 imagination... BRILLIANTLY ENGINEERED! | PLAY-OFF TOP TEN |G. Westfall, Belko {Armstrong, Belko {Arnold, Belko Lintner, Belko | Richards, Belko Wills, Belko Steffan, Belko West, Tony's A. Myles, Tony's 0 13:00 Harmon, Tony's Mon treal 76-70 to advance into the --CP Wirephoto be decided at 9.30 on March 26th.| johnston 1 and Kolesnick 1. ST. JOHN'S CADETS -- Esmits Coach -- John Piatti. 22, Dalidowicz 12, Campbell, -- Hooey 8, Adair 3 and Brady. Coach -- Ernie Derry. CKLB Skotchko 11, Bourdage 19 Team Spirit | Top Favorite LONDON (AP) -- Irish-trained Team Spirit took over from] Wyndburgh as the betting favor-| ite Monday night for the March 26 running of the Grand National| steeplechase. Britain's top bookies clipped | 12, Hicke) Stimming and | Tirst Professional Hockey Player Dies PITTSBURGH (AP)--Jim Mac- kay, 78, one of the first profes- s'onal hockey players to compete in the United States, died in hos-| ins 1 pital Monday of a heart ailment.|Team Spirit's odds from 11-1 to| |" A native of Scotland, Mackay 8-1. At the same time th moved to Ottawa as a boy and |lengthened the odds on Wynd immediately took up the game of| burgh, favorite for the race ever| Standings: Montreal, won 38, tors. Skating is an individual since betting stanted, from 8-1 to 11-1. Those changes followed races in| the past few days. | Team Spirit won the four-miles| |Hurst Park National trial handi-| cap steeplechase by two lengths| last Friday. His jumping was im-| maculate. | { hockey. He was a goaler on the Ottawa team which won the Allan Cup, symbolic of senior amateur |hockey supremacy in Canada, in the 1901-02 season In 1902, the entire team shifted to Pittsburgh and turned profes- sional. bleeding. The crowd invaded the ring tried to embrace Hernandez. Moore was rushed to an emer- gency hospital. Later he was and {taken to his downtown hotel, but | iy Barbara Wagner to win the a noisy crowd formed there. Some protested Moore had been forced to continue fighting after his jaw was broken. Moore was transferred to a suburban hotel to escape the crowd. Moore weighed 127%, dez, 130. Herpan- tor at the Games, to go take a | jump. "I'm not the type who goes out to break down other sports," said {Bob Paul of Toronto who teamed Premium Quality Olympic pairs gold medal and then the world title for the fourth consecutive year at Vancouver. "All I can say is that the endur- ance and strain on us, both men. {tally and physically, is very great, 'Figure skaters are among the VIGOR NHL LEADERS By THE CANADIAN PRESS lost 16, tied 12, 90 points. Points: Horvath, Boston; Hull, Chicago, 79 Goals: Horvath, Hull, 38. Assists: McKenney, Boston, 45. Shutouts: Hall, Chicago, six. Penalties: Brewer, Toronto, 144 minutes. |greatest athletes in the world. |Our five-minute free-skating per- {formance is like a track man run- ning the mile. | "Sure, we have private instrue- OSHAWA RA 5-1109 sport and skaters need individual NEW REDUCED PRICE STOVE OIL Courteous, Prompt Delivery OIL CO. For Delivery by Metered Trucks Phone WHITBY MO 8-3644 |trainers. I saw lots of skiing | coaches at the Olympic Games. {So I can't understand what he's {talking about. | "As far as mothers blowing our noses, all I can say is that usu-| {ally male skaters do not hovel 'their mothers along." BROOKLIN OL. 5-3221 AJAX 550 and he saw senior sertiice with Windsor and Whitby. Big "Army" seems to have the uncamny knack of being connected with i: winner, having played on the J]Viemorial Cup club in 1954 with the Tee- pees and on an Allan Ciip cham.-| pionship in 1957 with the Dunlops. | Arnold, an original Oshawa native, played most of hits hockey | overseas in Scotland an¢l as re-| cent as last year was ®nach of | the Bowmanville - Oronc) Inter-| mediate *'A'* Combines. Westfall, the elder brother in his family| of hockey talent, saw actij>n with| Whitby Juniors and wi th the | BOC's also: In the game last ww ekend, Tony's ran into a series of penal- ties which proved their downfall as Redy-Mix capitalized on these trips to sin-bin, potting 10" "tallies behind an unprotected Joe 'Mel- nick in the losers' cage Coach Reid figures his clu b can| and will bounce back in the: next game to even up the series, as he has written off the setback as just an off-color tilt. Our boys just were not up for the game: but they are all "hot" over the next one, he reports from the Tewny's camp. If Ted DeGray, "San bo" Smith, Bob Harmon and Al Myles get untracked, they could put Tony's right back into series con- tention as all these players ean put the puck in the net Game time for the sec ond game in the best 3-of-5 find! is set for the Bowmanville Are na, this Sunday with puckdropn ing time set at the usual 11:00 a.m. starting time SERIES "C" FINALS WLTFAPIS Belko 1:0.010 1 12 Tony's 010 1100¢ Belko leads series 1-0 GOALTENDERS' AVERAG1SS GA SO AVE. 3 0 1100 8 0 2136 Hawe, Belko Fielder, Bradley's { 2 Oshawa Boxers Beaten In Toronto TORONTO (CP Billy Mac - Donald, from the army's Wolse: ley Barracks in London, Ont., won a close, five-round decision over Oshawa's Louis Tollar in the: main amateur boxing match a: Palace Pier Monday night At 150 pounds, Roger LeBlanc Toronto, won a five-round deci sion over Pat Campbell, Guelph. Norm Adams, Wolseley Bar. racks, scored a technical knocks out in the second round of a scheduled three - rounder with George Haggerty, Oshawa. They fought at 160 pounds At 130 pounds, Mike Fascinato, Guelph, scored a technical knock- out in the second round of a scheduled three-rounder with Joe Harris, Toronto. REMEMBER WHEN. . .?/ By THE CANADIAN PRESS Babe Ruth took his first salary cut in baseball 28 years ago to- day, but the $5,000 reduction still left him $75,000 for the 1932 sea- son with New rk Yankees. He had received ),000 in each of the two previous seasons. The famed home - 1gger, who 1948, altogether earned Sis ne season con- tracts in 25 years ending w Brooklyn in 1938, R wil bo THE PURE FLOW OF CLEAN-THRUST STYLING ...THE SHEER LUXURY OF SUPERB FABRICS AND APPOINTMENTS ... THE TRADITIONAL QUALITY OF OLDS ENGINEERING . .. ALL COMBINE TO GIVE YOU AN AUTOMOBILE WITHOUT PEER--OLDSMOBILE FOR '60. 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