Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 May 1962, p. 16

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' KEEN STUDENT TOO Boy Hockey Whiz Does Social Work CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (CP)-- The intense Canadian youth is known as a hockey star but he spoke not so much of hockey as of his studies at Harvard and his work among underprivi- leged children. "Hockey is a wonderful game but it might provide an easy way out for a student--easy on the short run," said Eugene (Kemo) Kinasewich, 20, who was orphaned at 10. "J want an education. . - I want to be a person to whom kids will come for advice. This came as no surprise to a reporter who had been tipped earlier that Kemo's reaction to his request for an interview his: want he wants to talk about my student activities, including hockey -- fine. But if he wants to talk to Kemo, boy hockey tell him I'm out to lunch." Sports fame has been thrust upon the Edmonton lad who jed Harvard's crimson hockey squad to the championship of the Ivy League this last season, scoring 20 goals and 20 assists in 27 games. This could be heady stuff for a youth declared ineligible to play only a year earlier but it doesn't seem to jar the five- foot-eight, 160-pound scion of Ukrainian parents. WORKS WITH KIDS The sophomore led his inter- viewer away from. Harvard's prosperous neighborhood to one of Boston's run - down areas in suburban north Cambridge, where he is a volunteer worker at a settlement house in his spare time. Kinasewich, studying social relations at Harcard, declared: "There are 6,000 people in this crowded housing develop- ment. About 300 kids take ad- vantage of the settlement fa- cilities. I have my own group. We're almost like a boy scout troop--we play together, make money together, puzzle about our problems." "Many are added. When Kemo was 10, both his parents died of natural causes within a month, leaving a fam- ily of 13, including nine boys. "Because we were a large family, there was someone to take care of me. I was raised orphans," he OSHAWA 21 BOND ST. WEST by my brother Mike. If not, I might have got into trouble. But # my energies were channelled into sport. I've been interested in social affairs for a long time." Kemo was already a whizz- bang skater at 10 and by the ages of 16 and 17 was playing junior A hockey with Edmon- ton, tabbed as a coming Na- tional Hockey League prospect. "Playing 70 games a year, it was impossible to do justice both to hockey, and to school --both are very demanding," Kinasewich recalled. ONE-MAN TEAM Through his brother Orie, attending Colorado. University, Kemo came to the attention of Harvard men and his whole career was to change. He took ais final year high school at Deerfield Academy, Northfield, Mass., to 'orient myself" for his Harvard education--and at Deerfield he was a one-man hockey team. A bitter blow fell in his Har- vard freshman year when Ivy League deans meeting in regu- lar conclave voted him ineli- gible for all sports because he | had taken money in junior A --thus placing himself outside } their definition of amateur. But the deans upset their own ruling a year later when they © decided Kinasewich had re- ceived strictly expense money. They also noted such things as a lack of high school hockey in Edmonton and that many play- © ers were from poor families. Kinasewich stressed that Har- yard, which awards scholar- ships not for athletics but for need, changed no rules for him. He said a legacy from his. fa- ther enables him to pay half his tuition and the rest is pro- vided by a scholarship. In line with his studies, Kemo turned out a paper, The Hockey Complex, in which "I tried to illustrate the dilemma that pro- fessional hockey players are in." MONEY A LURE His idea is that countless youths--"at the crossroads"-- are lured away from school by hockey. money to live to regret it. Players lacking education lack bargaining power, he says, and quotes General Manager Muzz Patrick of New York ed at 10, played junior hoc- key in Edmonton until he moved to Massachusetts for his coliege education. This year he led Harvard to the Ivy League championship, counting. 20 goals and 20 as- sists in 27 games. EDMONTON-BORN Eugene (Kemo) Kinasewich, star for- ward with Harvard Univer- sity's hockey squad, is more interested in completing stu- dies in social relations and working with underprivileged children. Kinasewich, orphan- back this view. Patrick wasagain they would continue among many players and ex-school and college if they could. ecutives he questioned person- "The reason is they have a ally and by mail. great fear in their minds. They "There are only a few collegeknow that when they're 30 their graduates among professionallegs will begin to go. That will players--maybe five in 2,000,"be the end of one career and said Kemo, whose brother Raythe beginning of another." has been with Hershey Bears But Kemo himself is not deaf of the American Hockey Leagueto the old siren song. for seven years. "This is far "I hope someday to give pro different from foot bail andhockey a try," he said. baseball." "'My type of work will require "One hundred per cent ofgraduate studies. I hope to be those I asked replied that ifable to attend a pro camp and they were at the crossroadsstill continue with my studies. |Rangers, father of four boys, to FRIDAY SPECIAL LARGE SIZE BEACH BAGS @ Tote handle @ Zipper closure @ Assorted colors, Compare 1.49 59° LIMITED QUANTITY Sizes 12 - 14 only. Compare 1.98 .. Contains special GIRLS' 2-PIECE RAYON PYJAMAS AIR MATTRESS built-in cushion beams for extra comfort. BARBEQUE 18%" Long -- 1212" Wide -- 7%" High. The ideal camping companion. COMPARE 3.98 .. CAMPING 1.99 LIMITED QUANTITY 9.99 robin schedule of the day. Oshawa Oshawa Rangers, winners of the Knob Hill Appliances Soccer| Trophy, in the 1961 tournament repeated their triumph in the annual Victoria Day Tourna- ment held at Lakeview Park on Monday, displaying a superb brand of defensive soccer to re- gister shutouts in each of their three wins, during the round- Rangers blanked Lindsay 6-0 in the opening morning game and then came back in the early afternoon with a 1-0 decision over Aurora, in what was their closest game. Aurora was play- ing their second game in suc- esesion and were just a little too tired to cope with the Osh- awa club's steady pressure. Scarborough's- 'Neerlandia" club, runners-up for the tourna- ment laurels, were also victims of "the luck of the draw", be. ing extended to the limit to Rangers Win Victoria Day Soccer Tourney nose out Lindsay 1-0 in the fourth game of the day and then having to go right back on the field against Osha' gers, in the fifth game. Rangers won this one 2-0, to finish '° day with three wins for a total of six points. Johnny Richman, classy cen- tre-forward, was the scor'7¢ star for the Rangers, through- out the day, accountir seven of the team's total of nine goals. Wester brothers also played well. Neerlandia in their other twe games, edged Aurora 2-1 and Lindsay 1-0 for a total of four points. Aurora defeated Lindsay 3-1 in the final game of the tourney, to claim third place ahead of the winless Lindsay eleven. Walter McRae, secretary of the Oshawa and District Soccer Simcoe Hall Settlement House Forest Floor Hockey League ac- tion on Tuesday evening saw the Forest and Cedars walk off with one-sided victories. Poplars won their _ fifth- straight game in the opening ac- tion, as they trounced the Oaks 12-1. The smooth - working victors wrapped up this game in the first period by taking a com: manding 7-0 lead. The only reply came from the Oaks in the second period with Bill Melynchuk scoring. Merek Kollar with five goals, Bill Rajkovie with four, Oliver Galea with a pair and John Boivin with a singleton, quite capably handled Poplar's scor- ing. OAKS -- Dan Beatty, Charlie Kehoe, Lloyd Dykstra, Dave) Saunders, Dave Murphy and/| Bill Melynchuk. POPLARS -- Serge Dupont, Nazarino Viola, Ed Luke, Oliver Galea, Bill Rajkovic, Stan Cook, John Boivin and Merek Kollar. CEDARS GROW TALL Cedars put on the Scoring Sprees 'Highlight Week's Floor Hockey Go this season, in the second game, when they overwhelmed last- place Maples 17-3. Cedars never were behind as they held leads of 3-1 at the end of the first period, 9-1 at the second and finally 17-3. For the Cedars, Roger Rich- ard and Ted Boivin scoged nine and id seven goals respectively with George Pilpec picking up the other. Mike Davis, Ted Harrison and Jerry Halick each scored once for Maples. MAPLES Jerry Halick, Alan Boivin, Mike Davis, Nick Melynchuk and Ted Harrison. CEDARS -- George Grabow- ski, Roger Richard, Jim Gorycki, George Pilpec, Tom Baker and Ted Boivin. LEAGUE STANDING Ww A Pts, 21 10 3 aks 5 Maples 1 419 50 Games Tuesday, May 29: 7 Poplars edars 6 2 2 ' biszest|p.m., Oaks vs Cedars and at scoring splurge of any team|7.30 p.m., Maples vs Poplars. Association, presented the Knob Hill Trophy to team captain Johnny Richman, at the con clusion of the day's play. Referees for the six games were Phil Hill, Gerry Ploeger and Tony Huber. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, Mey 24, 1962 48 Association annual track meet. Banting Memorial of Alliston with 59, Richmond NEWMARKET, Ont. (CP)-- Thornhill High School piled up 78 points Saturday to win the championship of the Georgian Bay District Secondary Schools was second x Hill third with 47 and Midland- Penetang fourth with 45. setmenaivermesin SCOTTY'S BRAND NEW PATIO CENTRE NOW OPEN with swivel h Hanging Cedar FLOWER BUCKETS Concrete BIRD BATHS 12" x 16", PATIO BLOCKS--. SWOON newer ches bees PICNIC TABLES. Cedar. Complete with 2 benches Lawn-Boy POWER MOWERS Rose Trellis, e: to approx, 8 Fan Trellis ... Wall Panel Wall Ponel Trellis, -- 24" TRELLISES Tretlis -- 18" . Lawn'Boy's difference shows in the look of your lawn, 7 Model 5230. 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