BENNIE " _.:AE, of Michi- gan, is s' wn sprinting for an 8-yar gain for the North te after taking a pass from Eddie Wilson of Arizona, in the North-South mllege All-Star football game on Christmas Day. South's Bob Eggert (66) of U. of Miami and Bill Kirchiro (72). of Maryland, both missed the tackle. --(AP Wirephoto) South Defeats North In College All-Star MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- The South conquered the North in the Shrine's annual college all- star series, and the latest hero of this football civil war is Bay- lor's strong-armed quarterback, Bobby Ply. The shifty Texan plied a slow- moving Yankee defence with 14 successful passes to three tal- ented receivers Monday night and the Rebels, favored by only a point, rolled instead to an easy 35-10 victory. Glenn Glass of Tennessee was the catcher on a 46-yard touch- down aerial play, and Miami's two ends, Larry Wilson and All America Bil! Miller, snagged two other Ply scoring throws for 10 and seven yards. Ply overshadowed the North quarterback, Eddie Wilson of Arizona, who had an off night with 15 out of 39 throws. Ply also sneaked a yard for a fourth touchdown in winning the press box vote as the most valuable player of this series which the South now leads, eight wins to six. ATTENDANCE DROPS The game is played for the benefit of the Shrine's hospitals for crippled children, but the fi- nancial return was the lowest in the series history. Only 18,892 fans turned out in cold weather that dropped the temperatures into the 40s during the game, In completing 14 of 26 passes, zone. The Yankees added a saf- ety on the game's last play when Larry Bowie of Purdue tackled Ply in the end zone. However, Wilson gained the honor of starting the longest) pass play in the history of the| series. One of his pitches, to! George Sefcik of Notre Dame,| was good dor $3 yards, four) yards longer than the previous} record. Another Miami player, Jim) Vollenweider, slammed 18) yards for a South touchdown. The North's only touchdown came in the second period when, trailing 21-0,.Wilson|} passed five yards to Bennie} McRae of Michigan in the end| Biggest Receipts In Football History Is Prize In NFL Final By JACK CLARY NEW YORK (AP)--A purse of more than $1,000,000 financed in part by a new television con- tract that would have doubled the total receipts of the National Football League's title game 10 years ago, is in line for this year's game between Green Bay Packers and New York Giants. This will be the first year of the new $615,002 contract be- tween the NFL and the National Broadcasting Company to tele- vise the title game. Gate re- ceipts of more than $400,000 are expected at Green Bay's new stadium. The game, to be played Sunday Dec. 31, will be televised by the CBC on its trans-Canada network at 2 p.m. EST. Just how much television has meant to the ieague in terms of revenue may be drawn from the fact that the 1951 game in Los Angeles between the Rams and Cleveland Browns drew 57,522 fans. FIRST TELEVISED GAME It was also the first year that the game was televised. The NFL and the now-defunct Du- mont network signed a $75,000 contract. This contract and the gate receipts added up to a pot of $328,052.33, highest in the league's history at that time. This year, 200 outlets in the United States and Canada will carry the game and BC esti: mates 40,000,000 viewers. And even the viewers in Milwaukee, the Packers' second home, will see the game. Packers played Philadelphia Eagles last year in Philadelphia and the contract in effect then called for only $200,000. The new pact was negotiated last spring after bidding by the major net- works and a pay television firm, and is for twe years. GET TWO TOP ST. ARS National Football League Winning Contract Race NEW YORK (AP) -- The cap- ture of Ernie Davis, Syracuse's Heisman Trophy winner, and Merlin Olsen, Utah State's all- America tackle, has given a clear - cut victory to the Na tional Football League in its tal- ent signing war with the American League. Less than 24 hours after the announcement that Davis had agreed to sign an $80,000 con- tract with Cleveland Browns, the 265 - pound Olsen cast his lot with Lost Angeles Rams. He had also been sought by Saskat- chewan Roughriders and Cal- gary Stampeders of the West- ern Footbal] Conference. They became the sixth and} seventh of the AFL's eight top| draft choices to be snatched up PLAYER DROPPED GALT (CP)--Defenceman Ted Maki of Galt Terriers was ad- vised Friday that he won't be needed by Port Arthur Bearcats on their exhibition hockey tour of eastern and northern Europe. The Bearcats had asked to borrow Maki from the Ontario Hockey Association Senior A Terriers for 10 days to Strengthen the team for four contests against Swedish and Czech competitors. Maki was tc have left Dec. 26 and return Jan. 5, missing only one Terriers game. The Bear cats cabled Friday that they had tra player help. by the older league. The Amer- ican League has won out in only one of the tug - of - wars in- volving the No. 1 college picks of the two circuits. John Hadi, flashy Kansas quarterback who had been drafted by Detroit of the NFL, signed with the AFL's San Diego Chargers. At Santa Ciara, Calif., where he is training with the East team for the Dec. 30 East-West Shrine game in San Francisco, Davis said he considered both the present and the future be- fore agreeing to a | contract with Cleveland. "The Buffalo team in the American Football League of- fered me more money," Davis said, "'but it wasn't enough to offset the other things in- volved," Among the other things, Davis said, was consideration of off- season jobs and his future as a football player. "A player has pride and) wants to play with the best. I| don't mean to knock the other} league. Maybe in a couple of years it will be different." BRUMEL BEST MOSCOW (AP)--High jumper} Valery Brume] was named Rus- sia's male athlete of the year Friday by the magazine. Mos- cow Sports Week, which con- ducted a countrywide poll. Anna WEEKEND FIGHTS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York -- Emile Griffith, 159, New York, out pointed Isaac Logart, 161, Cuba, 10. Buenos Aires -- Federico Thompson, 146%, Argentina, outpointed Juan Carlos Ducay, 1454, Argentina, 12. (Argentine 1961 SPORTS REVIEW By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor Ordinarily the country's ama- teur sports leaders face New Year's Day much in the man- ner of folks who have celebrated too hard the night before. Their outiook is grim. be Woi so for 1962, a year that promises to be one of the rich- est in the history of Canada's unpaid athletes and officials. In- stead of begging for handouts to keep their sports alive and to finance Canadian teams in inter- national competition, they'll find the green stuff sprouting all around them. Last August the federa! gov- errment announced a $5,000,000- a-year program to aid amateur sport and promote physical fit- ness. If it doesn't bog down in red tape, the plan should soon beccme a reality. This is the rosy picture for the amateurs. But the pros, partic- warly in football, start the new yeor with some _-- uneasiness. They ve been living high off the hog tor nearly 15 years but offi- cials started to squirm in 1961, 4 \the year of the great experi- ment--partial East-West inter- * |locking schedule, LOSING FANS The greatest thing for the '/game of all time was the way officials described it in August. At year's end, it could be termed only a qualified success. Theie were disturbing signs. Operating costs remained high but. attendance at many parks was down, even in the playoffs. One team, Edmonton Eskimos, reported a whopping deficit of nearly $75,000. Among individual stars in '9€1 were three youngsters- all amateurs--who were stick- outs on an international scale. Bruce Kidd, 18-year-old Tor- onte student, streaked to fame jin distance races at track meets from New York to California. Mary Stewart, tiny 16-year-old from Vancouver, swam the 110- yard butterfly in 1:09 which was 1.8 scconds faster than the wor.d record set by Australia's Dawn Fraser. Harry Jerome, also of Vancouver, equalled the wor.a mark of 9:3 in the 100- yard dash--a record that was late: broken--and continued to hold a share of the 10-second world mark for 100 metres. FUTURE BRIGHT With the British Empire Gaines scheduled for Perth, Aus- traia, next November; any one --or all three--could lift Can- ada's prestige in amateur sport to a level unknown since the lush pre » Second World War days. There were other stars. Ber- nie Geoffrion of Montreal Cana- diens scored 50 goals to equal the National Hockey League rec- ord set 15 years earlier by re- tired teammate Maurice Ri- chaid. Geoffrion got the big one in Canadiens' 68th game while Richard scored his in the final game of the 50-game 1944-45 sea- son There was quarterback Ber- nie i'aloney, a bum to Hamilton Tiger-Cat fans in 1960 when Ti- cats finished last in the four- team Eastern Conference, but a hero when he led Ticats to the Grey Cup final in 1961, winning a place on the East all-star team and being chosen the coun- try's outstanding football player. Another was 33-year-old Bob Hayward of Embro, Ont., who won the Harmsworth Trophy in August for the third year in un- limited hydroplane racing. month later he was killed in the Silver Cup regatta at Detroit. TOP RIFLE PRIZE Nerman Beckett, bespectacled accountant from Ancaster, Ont., became the second Canadian in two years to capture the Queen's Kings four games to two in the jumor hockey final, Here's the story in golf: Canadian amateur champion: Garry Cowan, Kitchener, Ont. Willingdon Cup: British Col- umbia. Junior men's: Terry Camp- bell, Vancouver. Interprovincial team cham- pion: Ontario, Women's open: Judy Darling, Montreal. Women's close: Janet McWha, Vancouver. Senior and junior interprovin- cia) team champions: British Coluinbia. Canadian women's junior: Gayle Hitchens, Vancouver. nadian Professional Golfers jation: Stan Leonard, Van- chuver. S-- acky Cupit, a rookie from Texas, won the Canadian Open at Winnipeg. CK HAWKS WIN lsewhere, Queen's Golden Gacls won the Eastern intercol- leyiate football title, defeating McGili Redmen 11-0 in a sud- den-death playoff. Chicago Black Hawks won their first Stanley Cup in 23 years by knocking off favored Canadiens in the semi-final and Detroit Red Wings in the final. Hull-Ottawa Canadiens won the Eastern pro league and Port- land Buckaroos the Western league. Overseas, Canada kept the world amateur hockey cham- pionship when Trail Smoke Eat- ers ended in a point tie with Czecinoslovakia but won on goal average. Don Jackson of Oshawa, Ont., won his third North American figure - skating title at Phila- delphia and retained his Cana- dian title at Montreal. Maria and Otto Jelinek of Oakville, Ont., won both the North Ameri- can and Canadian pairs title as did Virginia Thompson of St. mecnwealth marksmen at the Bisley shoot in England. At home it was the West by a big margin over the East in in- tersectional competition. The Westerners cleaned up in curl- ing, look most of the honors in foutball and golf and split in la- crosse and basketball. The East won hockey and soccer titles. The big one was the Grey Cup at Toronto where quarterback Kenny Ploen led Winnipeg Blue Bombers to a come-from-behind 21-14 victory over Hamilton in the first overtime game in the cup's 52-year history. Winnipeg St. James Rods took the junior title 16-13 over Mont- real Rosemount Bombers. Inter- mediate champs are Quebec's Verdun Shamcats, 33-32 victors over Winnipeg's St. Vital Bull- dogs. Hee Gervais skipped an Ed- mouton rink to the men's Cana- diar curling championship, then won the three - country Scotch Cup competition in Scotland. The Joyce McKee rink of Sas- katoon won the women's and a rink from Oliver, B.C., skipped by Jerry Caughlin took school- boy honors. SPLIT HONORS Vancouver Carlings beat Brampton Ramblers in the se- nior lacrosse Mann Cup playoffs and Ontario's Hastings Legion- naires won the junior Minto Cup over Burnaby, B.C. Lethbridge Broders dethroned Tillsonburg Livingstons in the men's senior basketball and Hamilton Tigerettes beat Rich- mond, B.C., for the women's ti- tle. Montreal Concordia defeated Vancouver for the Canadian soccer crown, Galt Terriers won the Allan Cup, four games to one, over Winiupeg Maroons. Toronto St. Michael's Majors captured the Memorial Cup for a record fifth Prize, top award among Com- time, beating Edmonton Oil'Catharines, Ont., and Bill Mc- THE OSHAWA TIMES, ]} j Tuesdey, December 26, 154 This Past Year's Success Promises Well For 1962 Lachlan of Toronto In the dance cotupetition. in racing, longshot Blue Light, owned by Col. K. R. Marshall of foronto, won the Queen's Plate by a nose over Just Don't Shove from the Conn Smythe siable at Toronto's New Wood- bine The big Western race, the Canadian Derby, was run at Ed- monion in two divisions and won by B.C.-owned horses. General C won the first division and Gaundo the second. U.S. HORSE WINS Later, an American invader, Our Jeep, won the $50,000 Cana- dian Championship stakes at Toronto. Paudlers from Cartierville, Que., took the Canadian canoe championships at Ottawa for the fifth year and the host St. "atharines Rowing Club won the Henley. In tennis, Canada lost to Mex- ico in the North American zone Davis Cup series at Quebec City and foreign players swept the Canadian championships in Tor- onto Canadians won five of the nine titles at the junior cham- pionships in Ottawa. Marjorie Shedd of Toronto won the women's badminton ti- tle at Calgary. Men's honors went to Denmark's Erland Krps. In auto racing, Peter Ryan of Montreal won Canada's first sports car grand prix at Orono, Ont. Oddities of the year piled up in December. Nearly 8,000 paid up to $50 a seat to watch Floyd Patterson knock out Tom Mc- Neeley of Boston in nh rounds at Toronto in Canada's first heavyweight boxing title fight. The next day, Dec. 5, promoter Edcie Quinn called off a bout between world light - heavy champ Archie Moore and Cana- dian heavy champ Bob Cleroux just hours before ring time. Quinn's reason: A sick box of- fice. Arsenal Pulls Upset Edging Hotspurs 2-1 LONDON (AP)--Right winger Alan Skirton whipped in a goal 10 minutes before the end of the game Saturday and gave Ar- genal an upset 2-1 victory over defending champion Tottenham Hotspur in the English soccer league--a match watched by 63,000 fans. Tottenham, England's team in the quarter finals of the Euro- pean Cup of Champions, led 1-0 at haiftime on a goal by half- back Dave MacKay. Arsenal came back in the second half and levelled through certre-for- wa.d Mel Charles. Then Skirton got the winner. Arsenal centre - half Laurie Brown had a big hand in blot- ting out the Tottenham twin menace of inside - forward Jimmy Greaves and centre-for- ward Les Allen. The defeat left Tottenham three points behind league-lead- ing Burnley. Burnley, . whose match against Bolton was post- poned because of a frozen ground, still leads the standings with 30 points from 21 matches. West Ham United, which had no match today, is second with 29 points from 23 games followed by Everton with 28 points. Tot- tenham and Ipswich each have 27 points. Everton, a team packed with £200,000 ($560,000) of talent, moved ahead of Tottenham in the standings with a 3-0 victory over Fulham. A crowd of 30,000 saw Everton take the lead on a goal by inside forward Bobby Collins after five minutes. Ever- ton ied 2-0 at halftime and in the 75th minute Collins made it 3-0 for Everton. IPSWICH LOSES ipswich Town. who moved into Carleton's Big Basketball Do Opens On Wed. By ED TREFIAK OTTAWA (CP)--High school students in Ottawa are become ing vasketball-minded, and one of ihe reasons is Carleton Uni- versity's annual Christmas inyi- tational tournament. ; The tourney, Dec. 27-28 this year, brings together the top four city teams at the Christmas break and pits them against four. out-oi-town squads, Carleton's student affairs ad- viser, Norm Fenn, no mean basketball player himself, founded the annual meet 10 years ago when he was the uni- versity's athletic director, He says two reasons were to stimulate basketball interest in the Ottawa area and as a public relaiions gesture. Keith Harris, the present ath- leiic director, says it is aimed at promoting interest in high schooi basketball and improving the calibre of play. It was also a way the university could fulfil a service to the community. MEETING GOAL "It's working,'"' said Mr. Har- ris. 'In recent years attendance at the tournament has grown so rapialy that we almost broke even last year." "In a sense it has stimulated basketball in the area," said Mr. Fenn. "How much can be di- rectly accounted to the tourna- ment is hard to tell but it seems that general interest in basket- ball is growing. And every year the tournament has had sus- tained support. Usually the houses are close to capacity." Mr. Fenn said high school games often suffer from poor attendance because games are usuelly played after school or on weck nights when many cannot atiend. Attendance also depended on the brand of basketball. "If there are good teams, there is guod attendance. If the players show little interest, so do the spcetators."" OLD COUNTRY SOCCER 3-0 away from home to Man- chester City. Sheffield Wednesday grabbed al-1 tie at Birmingham and now has 26 points. Both goals came in the first half. Winger Alan Finney gave Sheffield the lead but soon afterwards inside forward Ken Leek made it 1-1 for Birmingham. Arsenal is seventh in the standings with 25 points. The ar- rivat of halfback Eddie Clamp from Wolverhampton made a big difference to Arsenal. Arsenal now has won 11 points from its last seven games. centre-forward. Barry Bridges scored for Chelsea in the 47th minute and landed his team a 1-0 victory over Aston Villa. Sec- ond-half goals from Derek Ke- van and another--a minute from time--by Keith Smith gave West the First Division for the first time in its history this year, lost Brcmwich Albion a 2-0 victory ovcr Leicester. By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special London, England Correspondent To The Oshawa Times LONDON -- English football clubs like Tottenham, over-load- ed with talent, with internation- als playing 'in their reserve team, are finding it difficult to keep these players happy when continually kept out of the first team. John Smith, an English youth international half-back, signed by the Spurs two years ago, when he was regarded as a coming full international play- er, has had only three first team games since then. He has been acting as understudy to the welterweight title bout). brilliant club captain, Irish in- 'Young Stars Dislike 'Warming The Bench' ternational Danny Blanchflower, and barring imjuries to Danny, has little hope of a first team place. It was therefore no surprise when he put in a request for a transfer so that he might move to some other first division club and enhance his prospects of some day playing for England. After a long talk with Totten- ham's manager, Bill Nicholson, he withdrew his request, molli- fied by Nicholson's assurance that as Danny Blanchflower is now getting on in years as a footballers, his chance would come before too long. Tottenham have other players in the same boat. Among their SPORT FROM BRITAIN 'Mademoiselle X' Has Bookies In A Tizzy By ALAN HARVEY LONDON (CP)--A mysterious blonde with a French accent is the symbol of a racing scourge that has British bookmakers} worried. | Tantilizingly known only as "Mademoiselle X," she is| widely believed to be the fetch- ing accomplice of a doping gang bent on making things even tougher for backers of favorites. Turf authorities are disturbed. At least a dozen doping cases have been confirmed this sea- son, and others go. unreported. The cry of foul is so frequent that Britain's racing reputation is in jeopardy. The blonde--one paper says gre is a brunette--is described! and later passes on information about stable Jayouts to the dop- ers. The drug is said to be a "seasick" pili available in any drugstore for a few shillings. Mademoiseiie X has been in- terviewed by Jockey Club of- ficials. but no statement has been issued. ANGRY AT BOOKIES Public wrath is directed against bookmakers. They are the only ones sure to benefit when a red-hot favorite goes down the drain. The theory is they either arrange the dopings or pay generously for informa- tion about "dead meat" -- a ace that has been doped to lose. One British trainer is so S Dmitriyeva, Russian tennis|as young, pretty and Parisian.) angry about the scandals that é decided to cuntinue without ex-/queen, was named woman sath-/Turf writers say she poses as alhe publicly, declared he would lete of the year. 'prospective buyer to bloodstock like to see bookies banned. This is less sweeping than it sounds. As iong as there are bookmakers who will profit from "nobbling" -- the British word for jaterfering with a horse--there will be tempta- tions, Some fans would like to see a pari-mutuel monopoly, as in North America. A racing writer told this re- porter that one of/the most notorious cases of all time oc- curred last spring. Pinturischio, early favorite for the~ Epsom Derby and medium of a heavy volume of winter-book betting, |proved unable to run in the classic. "Take it from me," the in- formant said, "the bookies cleaned up on Pinturischio. "And the thing that really |shocks me is that Pinturischio | was doped not once, but twice, just to make absolutely sure." players who would be a decided asset to any first division side, are Tony Marchi, understudy to the energetic Dave Mackay; Mel Hopkins, Welsh _ inter- national, a reserve back, and Terry Medwin, also a Welsh in- ternational, out of the Spurs' first team for two seasons be- cause of the brilliance of Cliff Jones. Added to them can be John Hollowbread, who was the first string goalkeeper until Scottish international Bill Brown came along, and now in the same boat is John Smith, Eng- land's centre forward last year, and now edged out of the first team by the signing of Jimmy Greaves and the moving of Les Allen to centre forward. He sees little hope of a future with Spurs now, nor does his young under- study Frank Saul. NOW IN DEMAND One result of all this is that other teams have their eye on Tottenham's surplus stars. Ful- ham want ir the worst way to buy Bobby Smith to bolster their punchless attack, | Chelsea, in spite of their lowly | standing, have a surplus of half- backs now that Andy Malcolm, | transferred from West Ham, is a regular in the side. That leaves out in the cold Frank Upton, whom Chelsea bought from Derby County for $45,000 at the beginning of the season. Upton wants a move, and Swin- don Town have made an offer| for him. But it is far short of| what Chelsea paid for him, so) they are likely to lose money on | the deal. Meanwhile, Chelsea are bi ding for players to lift them out| of the cellar. They have put in| a bid for Pat Quinn, Mother- well's international inside right, but may have to go a bit higher. They are also trying to persuade Leicester City to sell their Scot- tish wing-half, Ian White, but that deal is dragging because Leicester want to do some buy-) ing on their own account first. LONDON (Reuters)--Results of soccer games played Satur- day in the United Kingdom: ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Arsenal 2 Tottenham 1 Birmingham 1 Sheffield W 1 Blackburn vs Man United, ppd Biackpool $ Cardiff 0 Bolten vs Burnley, ppd Chelsea 1 Aston Villa 0 Everton 3 Fulham 0 Man City 3 Ipswich 0 West Brom 2 Leicester 0 Division' 1 Leeds 1 Liverpool 0 Lu'on 0 Plymouth 2 Middlesbrough 2 Leyton Or 3 Newcastle 0 Preston 2 Norwich 2 Charlton 2 Southampton 3 Huddersfield 1 Stoke 1 Sunderland 0 Swansea 3 Brighton 0 Walsall 2 Derby 0 Division II Halifax 0 Portsmouth 1 inro:n 0 Watford 0 : Newport 1 Coventry 2 Noithampton 2 Hull City 0 Gilhngham 4 Workington 2 Mansfield 1 Wrexham 2 Southport 0 Hartlepools 1 Tranmere vs Darlington ppd SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division I Airdrieonians vs Stirling ppd Dundee U 3 Partick 5 Falkirk 0 Hearts 2 Hibernian 1 Dunfermline 2 Kimarnock 1 Motherwell 2 Raith 0 Celtic 4 Rangers 2 Aberdeen 4 St. Johnstone 1 Thd Lanark 2 St. Mirren 1 Dundee 1 Division 11 Aljoa 2 Montrose 0 Brechin 0 Stenhousemuir 3 Clyae 4 E Stirling 1 CowGenbeath 1 Stranraer 1 Forfar 5 Albion 1 Hamilton 5 Arbroath 0 Morton 1 Berwick 0 Queen of S 3 East Fife 1 Queen's Pk 3 Dumbarton 6 IRISH LEAGUE Ballymena 1 Portadown $ Bangor 0 Linfield 1 Cliftonville 0 Coleraine 0 Derry City 1 Crusaders 1 Disuliery 2 Ards 2 GAME IMPROVING He said Canadian basketball has been poor but now is im- proving. As a direct result, its popularity is growing. "Players are coming to Carle ton from the high schools now betier-drilled and more able to play university ball than they were only a few years ago." Sudbury, Peterborough, Corn- wai, Renfrew and Montreal schools have sent teams to the inviiational, and this year the university invited the senior Tor- onto St. Michael's high school team. Cttawa's Fisher Park High schcol seniors last year ran away with the tournament and subsequently came second in the Ontario Golden Ball basketball chainpionship. All participating teams are guaranteed two games. If they lose the first round, they go into the consolation flight. The wine ner and runner-up play three gumes. Recently Assumption Univers- ity in Windsor, Ont., started a similar tournament, and Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., which used to hold an invita- tional at Easter, now has moved Glenavon 2 Glentoran $ it te the Christmas holidays. 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