Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Jan 1962, p. 14

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' 14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, January 31, 1962 NHL OLDTIMERS REVIVE MEMORIES FOR VANCOUVER FANS "Pony Line" but on Monday night in Vancouver, things were different, The above shot There was a day when Bob- by Bauer of the famed Boston Bruins "Kraut Line" wouldn't think of passing the puck to | was taken during the NHL Doug Bentley, former star of | Oldtimers hockey game here the Chicago Black Hawks | when 3,500 fans enjoyed the "lguard, Bob Wright, unable to By GERRY BLAIR With only 19 seconds remain- ing in the game, Bill Smith scored his 22nd goal of the Metro Junior "A" campaign to give the Whitby Mohawks a 2-1 decision over the luckless Unionville Seaforths, last night in Whitby. Unionville carried the play in the final two periods, but couldn't cope with the agile antics of Whitby netminder Bob Perani, who blocked a total of 38 shots, Gary McCullough shared the spotlight along with Perani for the Mohawks, playing nearly 60 minutes on defence. He was called upon to take up the slack due to the absence of rear- counted for the goal, tapping in his own rebound. Unionville deserved a better fate, as they continued to domi- nate the game in the third period, and held Whitby to a mere five shots on goal -- none in the dangerous category, But it was their misfortune to ac- om defeat on Smith's late goal. HORT NOTES Whitby centre, Julie Kowaiski was hurt in the third period as a result of a collision with Butch Mac- Lean, The extent of his injury was not immediately known, but it appeared to be his ankle, . . .» Unionville has now drop- ped five in-a-row and stand chance of losing sole posses- sion of the fourth and final play-off pusition tonight, when the Brampton Seven-Ups host Marlboros. A Brampton victory Goals Are Scarce As Whitby Mohawks Nip Unionville Boys 2-1 4/smith, Fletcher, Dowe, Collins, | 1, Whitby: Fletcher Unionville, Sunday afternoon they meet St. Mike'sat the Gar- dens, then on the following Thursday they journey to Brampton. ... Saturday, Feb- ruary 10 is their next home attraction against St, Michael's College Majors. UNIONVILLE -- goal, Char- ren; defence, Olivier, Kelcher, MacLean, Cullimore; forwards, Winterstein, Brigden, Watson, Screen, Saunders. Stroud, Ro- worth, Johnston, Paul, Regis. WHITBY -- goal Perani; de- fence, Bobbie, Bishop, Carnegie, McCullough; forwards, Tran, Switzer, Shearer, Kowalski, Butler, Weller, ° First Period (Carnegie) ....seeee0++ 2.30 nostalgic exhibition game. Bobby Bauer (No. 8) missed on this shot as Blues downed Bauer's teammate Doug Bent- ley. Other former NHL greats in action included Clint Smith, play because of work cammit- would create a te for fourth|, Penalties: Butler 4.37, Regis BERLIN (AP) -- General NATO ban on travel by East Germans may cause Russia, Czechos 10 v ak ia, Sweden and The Netherlands to pull out of the world ice hockey champion- ships, scheduled at Colorado Springs March 7-18, At the same time, it may can- cel the world alpine ski cham- pionships opening Feb. 10 at Chamonix, France, and turn the meet into nothing more than an international competition. The ban, imposed last Sep- tember in reprisal to the Com- munist wall in Berlin, appar- ently will not be relaxed in or- der to permit East German participation in the two events. Authoritative Allied sources in Berlin said yesterday there is no chance whatever of the East German teams getting the nec- essary travel permits, In NATO countries, visas are granted only if travel permits are se- cured. ments. Brian Fletcher scored. the only goal of the opening period |place. . Whitby's victory jevened their record with Union- jville at two wins and two 9.54, Kelcher 18.37, Second Period | 2, Unionville: Regis (Watson, Culliraore) ... 5.00 Bill Mosienko and Walter (Babe) Pratt. the Whites 8-4. Jack McGill went to the ice in deflecting the shot, that crossed to! --(CP Photo) SPORTS MENU +... F. First, By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR | 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' THIS YEAR'S Ontario representatives in the Do- minion Diamond "D", ladies' Canadian single-rink curl- ing championships are ,having a mighty tough row to hoe, here in Southern Ontario. Following two days of keen play and numerous upsets, not the least of whic is that Mrs. Selkirk's Peterborough rink hasn't won a game yet, they. still have four of the eight district win- ners tied for first place with three wins and one loss apiece and Mrs. Dalrymple of St. Kitts is next with a two-and-two record. She upset Mrs. Laurin of Union- ville yesterday morning, on an extra end; Mrs. Shaw of High Park, who ousted Mrs. Wooley of Granites, 1961 ' Ontario winners, in this year's playdowns, handed Kitch- ener's Mrs. Schmidt's rink their first loss in the morning and Mrs. H. Irwin of St. George's did the same to Mrs. Ough of Barrie but in the afternoon play, Barrie turned on the High Parkers; Kitchener swamped St. Kitts 14-0. Mrs, Ough trailed Mrs. Shaw 7-1 at one stage but came on to win over the High Park rink 11-10. This morning * Kitchener faces St. George's and Barrie meets Unionville, so the four-way tie will be reduced to a two-way tie : tor first place, right there. Mrs. Selikirk's Liftlock City * Jadies haven't won one yet -- watch them hit top form against one of the top rinks. OSHAWA RINKS in the Quebec International Bon- spiel are making a creditable showing. "Preem" White- ' ley and his rink, Bill Jack, Alex Mackay and Tom 'Rus- sell (one is a "spare" in turns) defeated a Sydney rink in Chateau Trophy 2nd round and a favored Moncton rink skipped by Cece Peake, in the third round, 7-6 on 'SUES REFEREE an extra end. But in the quarter-finals, Joe Thomas and his powerful Quebec Club rink, winners of the Omega Trophy last year, knocked off Whiteley and his men 12-5. In the Omega, Oscar Parker's rink beat W. R. Rourke of Quebec Vics 10-7 in second round and beat Creighton of Dartmouth, N.S., 10-0 in the 2nd 'round of the Francois Jobin event. Cec. Stephenson's rink bowed out of the Holt-Renfrew Trophy play in the first round to Dr. Jim Elliott's Quebec rink, 13-4 but came back to eke out a 9-8 win over R. S. McCauley of Seaforth, Ontario, in the opening round of the Wedge- wood Trophy play. Starting today, the rinks have to hh |Mrs. C. B. Schmidt. of Kitche-/Club vs Canadian Legion, at when the Mohawks played their best 20 minutes. Fletcher let a hard drive go from just inside the Unionville blueline, to beat netminder Ricky Charren. Four Rinks In SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY'S GAMES Ladies' Playoff | : HOCKEY TORONTO (CP)--Four of the , eight rinks remained tied for| OHA Lakeshore Intermediate first place Tuesday after four|League--Trenton at Port Perry, | rounds of the round-robin South: '§.30 p.m.; Bowmanville at Belle- ern Ontario women's curling ville, 8.30 p.m. playoffs. ; are | Sharing the lead with three) Oshawa Minor Assoc. -- (Mid-| wins and a loss were Mrs. H. S.|get League) -- Navy Club vs) Irwin of Toronto St. George's,/Local 222, at 6.30 p.m.; Lions| ner, Mrs. Cyril Laurin of Un-|7.39 p.m. and Ki Cc ionville and Mrs. John Ough of heties Club, at grog All Barrie. fey ' *hildren' Mrs. S, J. Dalrymple of St. , aban a shawa Children's has : Catharines a 2-2 record |while Mrs. S. J, Gingerick of} GAMES FOR THURSDAY London and Mrs. J. H. Shaw of|HocKkEY |Toronto High Park have one; OHA Little Big Five Junior win and three losses. The Pe-«G» League -- Oshawa Juvenile terborough rink of Mrs. C. C.'\° Newmarket, at Newmarket Selkirk is winless in fourgs9 ym, : games, ' Tuesday's results: OHA Lakeshore Intermediate League -- Belleville vs Bow- Third Round : Mrs. Shaw 11; Mrs Schmidt 9 Manville Shamrocks, at Bow- manville, 8.30 p.m. Mrs. Irwin 11; Mrs. Ough 6 Mrs, Gingerick 15; Mrs. Selkirk! Oshawa Minor Assoc. -- (Ju- 0 venile League)--Oshawa Dairy Mrs. Dalrymple 9; Mrs. Lau- vs Beaton's Rairy, at 8.30 p.m. rin 8 (extra end) and Hayden Macdonald's vs Fourth Round |Tony's Refreshments, at 9.30 Mrs, Ough 11; Mrs. Shaw 10 p.m.; Mrs. Schmidt 14; Mrs. Dalrym-|Children's Arena. all OBA Meeting Mrs, Laurin 9; Mrs. Gingerick 4 Mrs. Irwin 14; Mrs, Selkirk 3 In Oshawa, Mar. 16 ST. CATHARINES (CP) i : |Tommy Rowdon of St. Cathar- STROKE-ON - TRENT, Eng-jines, secretary of the Ontario land (AP)-A fan is going to |Baseball Association, announced sue the referee whose penalty |Tuesday the 1962 annual meet- award knocked his home jing will be held in Oshawa team out of the English Foot- March 16 and 17. ball (Soccer) Association Cup --$_____-- tournament That penalty gave Black- burn Rovers a 1-0 victory over Stoke City Saturday. Cyril Cliff, a Sioke City fan for 38 years, disputed the pen- alty and announced Sunday: North Bay Ties 'Frontenacs 2-2 Seaforths took over in the second frame and evened the count when enjoying a man) advantage, with Gary Butler in the penalty box. Bob Regis ac- losses on Whitby ice. It was the) 10th decision in 14 home games| Penalties: Butle: 3.09, Win- for the Mohawks. . . . Former terstein 7 48; Coliins-9.41, Mac- Toronto Maple Leaf star, Harry|Lean 15.22, Kowalski 18.01, Col- Watson picked Bob Perani,/lins (minor and major), Win-) | Ricky Charren, and Gary Mc-|terstein (major) 19.52. | Cullough as the game's three} Third Period | stars. . . . The Mohawks now) 3. Whitby: Smith face three-straight road games.| (Tran, Collins) iSaturday night they are ini No penalties. ean Three Teams Tied In Final P Biddy Basketball League ac- layoff Spot Brian Fines; Gary Manser;|game at all times. Quarter Randy Jackson, 2; Bill Way-|time scores were: 2-2, 2-2, 2-2 While officials of both the hockey and the ski champion- ships prepared for meetings to begin this weekend, indications were the ban would deplete the field for one event and scuttle|to be considered at a meeting the other. Spokesmen for the Dutch and Swedes -& Dutch Might Also Shun World's Tourney federations said there is a strong chance their teams will not compete at Colorado Springs, despite the insistence of Bob Lebel of Montreal, pres- ident of the International Ice Hockey Federation that the competition will go on as sched- uled. Col. Joachim Gruenwald of the East German Hockey Federation was quoted Monday as saying Russia and Czechos- lovakia will pull out if East Germany is barred. Eighteen countries have ent- ered the Colorado Springs championships and this would reduce the field to 13. In Lon- don, however, John F. (Bunny) Ahearne of the European sec- tion of the hockey federation said there is n in the rules saying how many teams should make up a world cham- pionship, Only for teams started the 1953. world tourna- ment and one of those with- drew. The hockey situation will be discussed by Lebel and organ- izers of the tournament at Col- rhe Springs next Monday. The ski situation is scheduled lof the International Ski Feder- jation in Bern, Switzerland, on ~jand Swedish national hockey|Sunday. MAPLE LEAF GARDENS HAS TORONTO (CP) -- Maple Leaf Gardens is caught up in a controversy lively enough to eclipse such usual hot- stove topics as whether a Gor- die Howe today is as good as a Newsy Lalonde in his prime. The home of the National Hockey League Leafs is di- i FIREFIGHTERS MOVE UP Both games at Oshawa u ltion Saturday morning at the Simcoe Hall Settlement House provided plenty of action and excitement with no less than |three teams now tied for fourth place. ling, 10; total 12. | MUNDINGERS: Coach, Mar-| cel Boivin; Jerry Ogden, 2; Ron| Inroy,, 4; Brian Lynch, 6; Ed Luke, Don Sugden, 2; Steve Bird; Nick Corneal, 10; Mike Zimny. Total 24. BOLAHOOD'S TIE. FOR 4TH In the final game of the mor. | | Firefighters closed the gap lon JC Blues as they edged ming, Bolahood | Sporishaven| CKLB by a 10-7 score and!pulled themselves at least par- | canal within two. points of/tially out of the cellar, as they| second place. |downed the improved Parts and The Firefighters wasted little|Service Club 8-4, ltime in establishing a comfort-| Sportshaven's win tied them able lead by leading 5-2 at|for fourth spot with Parts and quarter-time and 9-2 at the half-|CKLB and with just a few weeks way mark. of regular league play remain- However CKLB never gave/!8, & real battle is on between | p as they came right back/|these three teams. | and with two minutes remain-|. This game was a close-check- | ing in the game, were within|!"& contest © throughout, with one point of catching their op- \* ery few opportunities at ponents but they just didn't) easy" baskets coming up. Ihave that little extra power to! Mhe scores at each quarter | grab the lead. | FIREFIGHTERS: Coach, El- \der Graham; Brad Barnoski, 5; | Paul Sargeant, Alan Boivi a SAVE $$$ | | | in Dave Lee, Bill Melynchuk, 2; Earl Wotten, Bill Swindells, 3; |total 10. | CKLB: Coach, Jim Rowden; Nick Melynchuk, Ray Spratt, |Milt McKean, Walt Hular, 2; Pete Plob, 5; total 7. | |MUNDINGERS BOOST LEAD Mundingers showed why they lead the Biddy League by eight points when they trounced sec- and the final 8-4. PARTS: Coach, Wike Karas; Andy Kit, 2; Tom Tullock; Ke- vin Sawyer, 2; John Sagan; Gary Manser; Dennis Myles; Albert Foster; total, 4. SPORTSHAVEN: Coach, John Matthews; Rick Corby, 2; John Jessup; Bill Rajkovic, 4; Gary Morrison, 2; total, 8. Officials for the morning in- cluded: M. Karas, B. Goddard, G. Nelson, J. Matthews, Elders Abercrombie and J. Graham. W L Pts. ll 7 6 Mundingers Blues Firefighters CKLB 4 Parts 488 Sportshaven 48 8 - Games this Saturday, Feb. 3: 8.30 a.m.,CKLB vs JC Blues; 8.55 a.m., Firefighters vs Parts 6 12 8 8 1 22 | 514 vided over the best method of keeping a bat out of centre Red Kelly's red hair. The winged varmint buzzed Red as he returned to action Saturday night after a month- long injury layoff, then flitted back to the girders in the high-domed Gardens roof. | Rival efforts to get rid of | the pesky invader have pitted the old-fashioned broom-swat method against an attempt to drive the beast tc distraction with radio waves pitched higher than the human ear can hear The modernists are led by radio - control dens public address system in an attempt to jam the bat's natural radar. HITS TRADITIONALISTS Whitey McAllister of the Gardens maintenance staff | | and Service, and 9.20 a.m., indicates the closeness of the Bolahood Sports vs Mundingers. | heads traditionalists who expert Bob | Wood, who is using the Gar- 'BAT-IN-BELFRY PROBLEM stand by the broom method. Electronics advocates scored a point Monday when Wood claimed credit for a successful anti-bat operation a couple of seasons. ago. That bat was found battered to death on a roof girder four days after the sound-wave system was used. "We take a variable audio oscillator and tune it up to high frequency above audibil- ity of the human ear," Wood explained. "From my understanding, a bat's ability to fly without hit- ting solid objecsi is based on | its natural, built-in radar sys- tem, Briefly non-plussed by such jargon, the tradtionalists re- covered quickly and struck back Tuesday, Whitey McAl- lister unveiled his new bat- killing device, a regulation | broom with the bristles drawn apart down the middle. "When you swing an ordi- nary broom at a bat," Whitey explained, "the whoosh causes a vacuum that makes the bat swoop up towards you. Split the bristles and you avoid this. "It's simple aerodynam- ics." "T have instructed my law- By THE CANADIAN PRESS |ond-place JC Blues by a 24-12 REE RRR RRR RRR eee SAVE $$$ ) ' SMASHING PRICES ON win, or drop into one of 'the minor trophy competitions, | yers to issue writs against the known in bonspiel parlance as '"'a rat race" because a rink can be drawn to play three and even four times in 24 hours. Galt Swamps Poor Maroons ! By THE CANADIAN PRESS |other two came from Bob Ma- The league - leading Galt Ter-\der and Bob McKnight. 'riers erupted with seven goals| Joe Malo, Earl Towers. and «in the first period and demol- George Aitken scored for Cha- 'ished the disorganized Chatham tham. Maroons 13-3 in Ontario Hockey ' Association senior action Tues- the Maritimes later this week * day night. for three exhibition games, row The game before ; than an exhibition as the Ter-|in hand «riers loaned defenceman Butch|SCORES HAT-TRICK *Keeling and left winger Lloyd| Gerry Theberge scored his|North Bay -handed/second hat-trick of the season S. S, Marie «Mercer to the short * visitors. in Woodstock's 6-2 win over In the other league game Stratford. He had 16 goals since/Kiggston 2 North Bay 2 Thursday night Woodstock Ath-/he joined the athletics a month letics kept their slim first-place/@go. hopes alive when they beat! For the second time in two Stratford Indians 6-2. games the athletics were Galt, bolstered by *forthcoming world tournament,|it. Jean Marc Asselin . scored an eighth goal in the sec- ond period and slammed in five more in the third. Tod Sloan notched three, bringing his total 'to 11 in eight games. Bobby Brown, picked up from Windsor «Bulldogs, Pete Kowalchuk, Joe 'Hagan and defenceman Ted 'Maki each scored a pair. The 'George Knudson Is Sixth Top Winner » DUNEDIN, Fila. (CP) -- 'George Knudson of Toronto 'Oakdale, has climbed to sixth "place among the top money winners on the professional golf trail in the United States. He| Football Association Cup has placed among the top five} Fourth Round in the four tournaments he has Burnley 1 Leyton Or 1 entered 2nd won $4,711. Fourth-round Replays ; Heading the list with $11,250Ipswich 1 Norwich 2 _ is Gene Littler of California,|Walsal 0 Fulham 2 followed by Phil Rodgers, $9,- SCOTTISH LEAGUE 'he eng wg tenets, $7,510, Division I oug Ford, 925, and JoeMhd Lanark vs Falkirk ppd, wet Campbell; $4,746. \grounds. - = corner. The other Woodstock goals Myers. Gary Luyben and Joe Beale were the Stratford marks- |men. OLD COUNTRY SOCCER SCORES LONDON sults country soccer games: (Reuters) Re. The Terriers, who move on) By THE CANADIAN PRESS 725 Galt are three points ahead of the! Kingston 'fans, amounted to little more|Bulldogs, who have four games) Kitchener several awarded a penalty shot -- and Galt «players in preparation for the|for the second time they missed) Windsor was| Woodstock pulled down from behind and/| Waterloo Theberge was nominated to take! Strathroy the penalty. He was stopped|Chatham while trying to make the lower! Stratford were scored by Eddie Harrison,|Chatham 3 Galt 13 who notched a pair, and Don Stratford 2 Woodstock 6 Niagar: of Tuesday night's old) Vancouver 0 Edmonton 7 referee and the Football As- | sociation alleging the match was not properly refereed." Cliff claimed that referee Harry Webb also aisallowed a legitimate Stoke goal, "But it was the penalty which decided me to sue,"" he said. Webb took it calmly. "Pm just the lad who's in there to be shot at," he said. | "I stand by my decision." North Bay Trappers gave the injury-riddled Kingston Fronte-| nacs a taste Tuesday night of what may be in store for them! tonight, : The Trappers, who entered) the game tied for last place in| the Eastern Professional Hockey League, tied the league- leading Frontenacs 2-2 and! would have defeated them de- cisively had it not been for the} goalkeeping of Frontenacs' Ed| count. Mundingers, with some fine| passing and: accurate shooting, | moved out in front early in this game with a seven-point cushion in the first quarter. The Blues showed that they) can come back as they narrow-| ed the margin to five points by| the half; the score reading 12-7. This comeback must have ex-| hausted the Blues' club as they We're clearing them out. And they've got to ge. You'll see as fine selection of quality tents here as you'll see anywhere . . . and et tremendous "'Out-They-Go" prices. First come . . « First served, TENTS Chadwick. Plagued with injuries to the point where they could ice only 12 regulars for the game, played at North Bay, Fronten- acs tonight play host to Hull- Ottawa Canadiens, who with seven straight wins are cur- rently the EPHL's hottest en- WLT F Aptittry. 2613 417413456) And tonight the Kingston 2417 4169 143 52)team will be without centre 2113 8128105 50/Jeannot Gilbert and defence- 1519 715016637;man Benny Woit, brought in 13 24 7 114 147 33 from the U.S, Eastern League's 1225 8 138 178 32)Clinton, N.Y., Comets. The Clin- Tuesday's Kesult |ton team has a game of its own jand can't afford to do without jits two stars, OHA Senior OPENS SCORING WLT F APt,. North Bay opened the scor- 221¢ 0169 9744\Ing in the second period on 20 7 1144 88 41\g0als by' Gary Mork and Norm 17 11 1136 110 35| Waslowski. 1514 010913830) Tom McCarthy, the le \ 1414 1120128 29| top scorer, broke goalie "Bain 1114 2131 112 24)Wakely's shutout at 1:10 of the 919 2114 163 20\third period when he scored his 423 1 85172 9/42nd goal of the season on a <e- Tuesday's Results jbound from a shot by Terry Gray Gray evened the score mid- way through the third, after 5 playing coach Orv Tessier, who set up both Kingston goals, won a faceoff in the North Bay end, HOCKEY SCORES STANDINGS Eastern Professional Hull-Ottawa Sudbury Tuesday's Result Buffalo 1 Quebec 5 Sarnia OHA Junio: A LT ! Hamilton 25 7 5 1681175! | Montreal 2410 3170 109 51) | St. Catharines 1515 6 144 144 36 |were swamped 12-5 in the final! half with Mundingers winning| quite handily. } BLUES: Coach, Don Caer: {Ron Lockland; Charlie Pace: (i | Again Scores one 'Upset Vict | 'Upset Victory | } ANDEFJORD, Norway (AP) Paul Inok, 27-year-old Canadian) speed skater, scored another| upset victory over well-known) /international long-distance skat- a lers Tuesday night. Inok, who started skating five ous years ago, won the 5,000-metre event in eight minutes, 58.8 sec- onds under unfavorable condi- tions ahead of Terence Mona- ghan of England who was sec- ond in 9:03.6. Last Sunday, the Toronto skater established two Cana- dian records for the 3,000- andi 5,000-metre distances in 4:57.3 and 8:30.0, respectively. } Inok will represent Canada ofl -" } | SKIPPER i Moscow Feb. 17-18. | Guelph 1319 5 142 178 31) Niagara Falls 920 8 132 149 26) Peterboro ' 823 5 82141 21) Tuesday's Result a Falls 2 Guelph 6 Western League CHICAGO (AP)--Pitcher Joe Stanka has personally purchased his contract from Chicago White Sox and will continue to play baseball in Japan Stanka came to the Amer- ican League for $30,000 in the summer of 1959 from Sa- cramento, Calif. However, Metro Toronto Junior A Unionville 1 Whitby 2 Ontario Junior B Orangeville 0 Owen Sound 3 Ontario Intermediate A Meaford 6 Barrie 1 Eastern League Charlotte 4 Philadelphia -» International League Minneapolis 4 Omaha 6 Muskegon 2 Toledo 4 7 a BUYS HIS OWN CONTRACT & TO PLAY BALL IN: JAPAN the world 'championships in a | \ he did his pitching in Japan the last two years despite complaints by the White Sox. Stanka, it was learned to- day, paid $15,000 to become free of the Sox and plans to continue pitching in 'Japan for the Nankai Braves. He says he earns more money in Japan than he can here. ONLY 6 LEFT FULL SIZE WITH ZIPPER SLEEPING BAGS 2 PICTURE Here is a tent ideal for a family of 4. Features sewn-in S floor, large screened window, zipper door, steel poles and NOW 52.29 REG. 74.95 ONLY !! WINDOW TENT THEY'V ~ 4 ONLY! FAMILY CABIN TOURIST Made from @ good heavy-gauge conves, Has zipper door, sewn-in fi plete with steel poles ond x 7%". Reg, 59.95. joor. 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