a iW THE OSHAWA TIMBS, Friday, November 23, 1962 "Wings Continue Fall Oa nd Bruins Plastered. As Leafs Toma-Hawked FILLED RUTH'S SHOES NHL LEADERS TORONTO (CP) -- George (Twinkletoes) Selkirk, the na- tive of Huntsville, Ont., who was named general manager of Washington Senators Wednes- day, has come a long way since 1927, He was an 18-year-old catcher then with stars in his eyes and a worn Satchel. By THE CANADIAN PRESS * Sparked by their big, smooth- skating first line of Earl Ingar- field, Andy Bathgate and Andy pofipbenton, New York Rangers * have quietly turned the NHL standings into a five-team fight. Rangers pounded the hapless Boston Bruins 7-1 Thursday 2 night before an incensed Boston crowd. The blazing Rangers have won four of their last five games to pull out of a race for > the league cellar with Bruins. * Boston centre Don McKenney * scored Bruins' goal with less t than two minutes left to play, > spoiling Ranger goalie Gump { Worsley's shutout bid. t Chicago moved into a first- place tie with Detroit Red } Wings by blanking Toronto >» Maple Leafs 1-0 while Montreal i Canadiens, inspired by masked 5 goalie Jacques Plante, shut out » the Red Wings 3-0 in Detroit. * . Montreal thus moved within { a point of third-place Toronto. » Ingarfield- counted two goals, %-his seventh and eighth of the ~ season. Bathgate, his linemate on right wing, scored once when | Boston was pressing in the sec- od period and added two as- * sists. SPOIL MILT'S DEBUT The Ingarfield-Bathgate-Heb- enton trio upset Milt Schmidt's debut as Boston coach Wednes- day night, each firing a goal in the second - period to shoot Rangers into a 4-2 win. They had as little mercy on Schmidt Thursday night as Bathgate moved into a tie for second place in individual scor-| ing with Parker MacDonald of Detroit, Each has 18 points, two behind league - leading Detroit centre Alex Delvecchio. New York defenceman Larry} Cahan also got two goals and p senna Dave Balon and rookie lefenceman Jim Neilson added) iv singles. Rangers were held toe nc a 1-0 lead during the first period|OUT FOR FIGHTING on Ingarfield's first goal, but} opened up a 3-0 lead in the sec-ld more markers in the third. At Chicago, BOB NEVIN, Toronto Maple | Leaf forward, misses his shot ond and riddled Boston's rookie} goalie Ed Johnston for four| goal during the second period was the night's scoring, but six |five-minute majors for fighting) By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Four of them were for aj ionnybrook which broke out SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR J ' ' ' ' t ' ' ' ' ' ' , ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' a ' ' ' ' ' > . ' ' ' 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' & JACK ADAMS, ex-General Manager of the Detroit Red ® Wings and for almost a half-century, one of professional * hockey's most colorful figures, first as a coach and manager, {will be tendered a testimonial dinner in Detroit on Tuesday \and a lot of members of Hockey's Hall of Fame, together ;-with NHL club owners, president Campbell and other -big- {rigs of the game, will be on hand to honor 'Smilin' Jawn"'. "But this could be a momentous occasion, one that will be long -"@emembered after the banquet smoke has cleared away. It Was announced yesterday that the hockey brass will adopt a draft system similar to the policy in vogue among profes- * -sional football, whereby the bottom team of the léague gets a first choice of the top Junior 'amateur' graduates. If this "plan is pursued, it seems logical to expect that NHL clubs will no longer be able to "'acquire" promising youngsters . and be sure of having them as permanent property.. Moving ® a "property-player" around among its sponsored teams will » still not protect that club from losing their ace prospect in g the draft, It is predicted that NHL clubs will now pass up pr the operation, control and financial sponsorship of many of the "'amateur" teams which now form the 'farm system" for various clubs. Maybe the NHL bosses will come up with some "'No Hunting" regulations to offset the return of this + draft version of '"'open season" on young hockey stars. If NHL {greatly curb financial support of age-limit teams, the crop + will be spread out all over the country, like mavericks, in 4 contrast to compact herds of talent, already branded and cor- * yaled. This might see the return of old-fashioned homebrew *-teams, at amateur level. If this was to happen -- it would be {far from fatal, but the possibilities of what might happen 'tertainly provide some food for thought. * x x x x N.Y. RANGERS handed the hapless Bruins a 7-1 lacing Dast night right in Boston, where the disgruntled fans put on faite a performance, far from in keeping with the dignity » of NHL status. New York's win put them up within two points of fourth-place Montreal Canadiens and served notice "that the NHL standing is going through a shuffle. Montreal Canadiens blanked the Red Wings and Black Hawks nosed out Toronto Mapleos 1-0. All of which finds the Chihawks now tied with Red Wings for top spot at 23 points apiece, as goaltender, Glen Hall, and Chicago rearguard, Elmer ; Vasko (4) look on during first ; Fleming drew seconds before the final horn) between Chicago's Murray Bal- four and Toronto's Ed Shack. Leafs' Tim Horton and Chi-| cago's Reg Fleming joined in.) four of the game's 25 penalties, spending 11 minutes in the cooler. | Montreal put on a _ strong show, with centre Phil Goyette opening scoring at 15 minutes of the second period and vet eran forwards Bernie Geoffrion| and Dickie Moore scoring in the a third. period action in Chicago, last night. --(AP Wirephoto) Hawk defence-| man Pierre Pilote's power-play] . | Sudbury Wolves can rleax.| |They return to their own kind! tonight. Thursday night they finished a three-game tour of the Inter- |national Hockey League that) |gave them two losses and a! | close-shave victory. Fort Wayne Komets defeated them 8-6 Thursday night. The Wolves were beaten 43 Wed- nesday night by Port Huron Flags and in their first IHL sortie they were hard-pressed for a 7-6 overtime victory over Muskegon Muskies. | Tonight the third-place Wolves are at home to the last-place Syracuse Braves, who walloped Minneapolis Millers 8-0 in the only other game Thursday. | The results made no change} in the Eastern Professional Hockey League standings. The top two teams, Kingston Fron- tenacs and Hull-Ottawa Cana- diens, were idle. Win One, Lose 2 'Wolves' Record Minneapolis visits Hull-Ottawa in the only other game sched- uled tonight. THREE GOALS DO IT Fort. Wayne killed Sudbury Thursday night with three goals in 45 seconds of the third period. Len Thornson and Ed Long each had a pair of goals. for the Komets with John Goodwin, Reg Primeau, Nelson Bulloch and Roger Maisonneuve getting the others. Ted Taylor, Mare Dufour, Mike McMahon, Bob Woyto- wich, Ed Ehrenverth and Dave McComb scored for Wolves. It was an entirely different story at Syracuse. The Braves had a 5-0 lead after the first period and they boosted it to 7-0 at the end of the second. Scorers were Milan Marcetta and Phil Esposito with two each and Duke Harris, Murray Hall, Bert . Fizzell and Don Grosso with singles. HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | National League L F APt 10 4.3 46 33.23) 95 5 51 4423 52 5119! 50 46 18) 10 2 60 63 16 110 41 63 7 Thursday's Results Detroit Chicago Toronto Montreal New. York Boston 9 1 i 4 7 2 5 | Mantron! 3 Detroit 0 | |Toronto 0 Chicago 1 | |New York 7 Boston 1 Games Saturday Boston at Montreal New York at Toronto | {Derek at Chicago | Games Sunday {Montreal at. New York /Toronto at Boston Chicago at Detroit | American League | Eastern Division LT ¥ 11 6 0 66 10 6 2 54 O 721 78 APt 49 22 53 22 60 19 5719 63 18 Hershey Quebec Springfield Providence 9 9 1 63 Baltimore 9 9 0 60 | Western Division Buffalo 11 5 0 50 Rochester 6 8 2 59 Pittsburgh 610 0 48 47 22 57 14 52 12 Tonight's Games Peterborough at Guelph Hamilton at Niagara Falls Eastern Division LT F APt 11 6 0 66 4922 10-6 2 54 5322 10 8 1 66 54 21 Springfield 9 7 1 78 60 19 Baltimore 9 9 0 60 6318 Western Division 11 5 0 50 6 8 2 59 Hershey Quebec Providence 47 22 57 14 55 10 90 8 Buffalo Rochester Pittsburgh 511 0 45 'Cleveland 415 0 50 Thursday's Result Pittsburgh 3 Providence 6 Other scores Thursday: Nova Scotia Senior New Glasgow 2 Moncton 7 Windsor 7 Halifax 9 Cape Breton Senior North Sydney 2 Sydney 3 Northern Ontario Senior Timmins 4 South Porcupine 6 Saskatchewan Senior Regina 4 Saskatoon 15 Eastern League {Clinton 3 Johnstown 6 Knoxville 6 Nashville 7 Intemational League Port Huron 2 Muskegon 8 St. Paul 4 Omaha 4 Metro Toronto. Junior A '| Rv THE CANADIAN PRESS | shutout. NHL BIG SEVEN Andy Bathgate of New York) has jumped into a tie for sec- ond place in the National| Hockey. League's individual scoring race. | Bathgate, in seventh place be- chalked up two sail and two} loped Boston Bruins 7-1. He now} has seven goals and 11 assists) for 18 points and is tied with) Detroit's Parker MacDonald. | place with five goals and 15) assists. The leaders: 5 15 20 9 9 18 7 11 18 7 10 17 6 11 17 8 8 16 8 8 16 7.938 Delvecchio, Detroit MacDonald, Detroit Bathgate, New York Geoffrion, Montreal Mikita, Chicago McDonald, Chicago Howe, Detroit Richard, Montreal PHILLY EAGLES' THANKSGIVING ? PHILADELPHIA (AP)-- Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League gave thanks Thursday, the United States' Thanksgiving Day--thanks they're alive. Coach Nick Skorich took this count of his injured for the season: Bill Byrne, slipped disc; Jim Skagg, broken leg; Dick Lucas, broken arm; Clarence Peaks, broken toe; John Wittenborn, broken finger; Pete Retzlaff, broken arm; Glen Amerson, encephalitis; Ted Dean, broken foot; Howard (Hopa- long) Cassidy, broken leg; Bobby Walston, broken arm. And if that isn't enough, Moose Detty, the trainer, dropped a trunk on his foot in New York last Sunday-- broken toe. Maury Wills Named MVP NEW YORK (AP) -- Maury |Wills, mercury-footed shortstop |with Los Angeles Dodgers and |the first major leaguer in mod- jern baseball to steal 100 bases }in a season, today was named |the National League's most val- juable player of 1962. | The 30-year-old son of a Bap- | ist minister won in a close race with Willie Mays, brilliant jcentre fielder of the champion |San Francisco Giants. Wills |drew 209 points to 202 for Mays jin the annual poll of a 20- man committee of the Base- ball Writers' Association of America. | It was the fourth time in the \last five years the award went jlo a shortstop, Ernie Banks of Chicago Cubs won in 1958 and| 1959 and Dick Groat of Pitts-| burgh Pirates (now with St.| Louis Cardinals) in 1960. | Wills flashed to 104 stolen| bases, played in all 165 of his team's games, including a three-game league playoff, col-| jlected 208 hits, batted .209 and) |fielded more than adequately.! chester, N.Y., with his family) after living his first 12 years) on Canadian soil' and had been jassigned to Cambridge, Mary- |Crisfield team, Cambridge's op- assists as the Rangers wal-jnever George had moved to Ro- land, in the Eastern Shore League. He arrived at the Cambridge with the wrong team.: You're park on the day of the game/supposed to be with Cambridge but managed, somehow, to get)as a catcher." into the dressing room of the) | position that afternoon. "I'm Selkirk and I've been|stayed with Crisfield to leain Plante fielded 24 shots for the sent here by Rochester," \to shag flies. George announced to Crisfield manager Dan Pasquelli. "What's that you've got in the) yankees' outfield. asked Pasquelli. t's my catching equip-) bag?"' "Tha ment," said George. "Hell," blurted Pasquelli. "I don't want a catcher. I want} an outfielder." | DECIDES TO SWITCH Selkirk thought quickly. "I can play the outfield as| dertaker, moved to Rochester in) fore Thursday night's game, well as I can catch," he re-| 1920. torted, even though he had his life. "Okay, boy," said Pasquettt | 'Twinkletoes' Selkirk -- Is Wrong-Way Corrigan |you sent down here from Ro- |chester?"' been in the outfield in| will likely be to ask explicit di-| By THE CANADIAN PRESS Standings: Detroit, won 10, lost 4, tied 3, points 23.¢ Pas of Delvecchio, Detroit, Assists: Delvecchio, 15. Shutouts: Sawchuk, Detroit, 3. Penalties: Young, Detroit, 54 minutes. "You get into a uniform. You're playing for Crisfield this after- noon." George borrowed a glove and Goals: MacDonald, Detroit, 9.! CANADIAN THIRD BERWICK, Pa. (AP)--Kevin Quinn of the Delaware Valley Athletic. Association won the 53rd Thanksgiving Day cross counttfy marathon Thursday in 48 minutes and 26 seconds. A field of 42 entered the 9.3- mile evnet,' which ended in @ driving rain: Second place went to Lieut, Alex Breckenridge of Quantico, Va., in 48:26, In third place was Robert Buchanan, of St. Cath- arines, Ont., in 49:24. recalls that it was his lucky) day. Not one ball was hit his! |way and "I got hold of a couple, at the plate." After the game, Bill Johnson,| manager of the Cambridge team, cornered him. "Say," said Johnson, "weren't Selkirk nodded. "Well, what a dumb cluck you've turned out to be. You're It started a war between the teams but George, who decided he didn't want to catch anyway, It paid off. He eventually re- placed Babe Ruth in New York Selkirk didn't play baseball in) Canada, but he was known as the Canuck to his New York teammates, His grandfather moved to Huntsville from Glasgow, Scot- land, and the family settled there. George's father, an un-| \. : The (lassie His first move at Washington rections to the Senators' dress- ing room. WASHINGTON (AP)--A fight on the playing field sparked a free-for-all among' teen-age spectators after a football game for the city's high school cham. pionship Thursday. Officials reported. at least 34 injured, two severely enough to be kept in the hospitals. Police hauled many off to police sta- tions to cool off and 14 were booked--mostly for disorderly conduct, with three on drunk charges. The melee spilled over onto parking lots and streets outside the huge District of Columbia Stadium where more than 50,- 000 fans had gathered. For about an hour after the game the youngsters battled one another and police. Three police dogs were among rein- forcements called in. Police said later two of the dogs had been kicked and mauled but the animals did not require veterinary attention. Two Medals, Two Records For Aussies By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor PERTH, Australia (CP)--In a tremendous display of power, Australian swimmers won their first two gold medals of the British Empire Games today and set a world record each time while Canada finished sec- ond twice behind the Aussies to capture a pair of silver medals. An Australian quartet an- chored by world freestyle champion Dawn Fraser swept to victory in the women's 440- yard freestyle relay in the world record time of four min- utes, 11.1 seconds. Minutes later in' the $1,000,000 Beatty Park Pool, Australia's men's 880-yard freestyle relay team established another world mark of eight minutes, 13.5 sec- onds. England finished third in each final for a pair of bronze med- als. And in the swimming heats, the Aussies also were virtually rewriting the record book. One Games record after another fell. CANUCKS ADVANCE In track and field, Harry Cleveland 415 0 50 Thursday's Result Pittsburgh 6 Providence 3 Eastern Professional LT F APt 10 3 3 55 52238 Pt 11 4.0 55 4222)" | Sudbury 68 2 65 7114 | Syracuse 29 3 42 557 90 8 Knob Hill 10 Brampton 8 Ottawa 'and District Junior Hawkesbury 1 Ottawa M. 9 Thurso 4 Ottawa Primroses 5 Hull Hawks 1 Buckingham 6 Thunder Bay Junior Arthur 5 Ft. Wm. Cdns 2 Manitoba Junior Winnipeg Rangers 3 Brandon 4 Ontario Junior B * although the Wings still have a couple of games in hand. ? Bruins go to Montreal on Saturday night and are at home to Leafs on Sunday while Chicago and Detroit have home-and- © nome dates this weekend, so a double-win for either team 'Swould create a four-point bulge. Sos x > 4 x x ALOUETTES are facing quite a task tomorrow. Besides "having to overcome an 1l-point deficit, right in Hamilton, Kingston Hull-Ottawa ' He drew. eight first-place votes| Jerome and two other Canadian to seven for Mays, and that!sprinters adyanced to the sec- proved decisive. First placejond round of the 100-yard dash, counts 14 points, second place|and in fencing a New Zealander jnine, third place eight and sojwon the gold medal for the jon down to one for 10th. |women's individual foils. COWAN IN LEAD __|Como invitational golf_ tourna- PURT ST. LUCIE, Fla. (CP))ment. Cowan; former Canadian \Gary Cowan of Kitchener held|amateur champion, shot a five- they've likely got to accomplish the task with at least two and maybe three regulars on the sidelines and a couple more, if in uniform, will be severely handicapped. Coach Perry Moss tried some of his ailing charges yesterday, in- cluding Don Clark and Bobby Jack Oliver, and they couldn't finish out the workout, This doesn't promise much for to- morrow. In order to maintain some semblance of power plus experience, Moss may have to use about six of his players -.gn double duty -- and against the hammering they'll get _ from those Tiger-Cats, they'll be lucky to be mobile by the *time the final quarter rolls around. Meanwhile, out in Winni- gepeg, they're expecting warmer. weather and little, if any, e wind, for their third and deciding game tomorrow. If Winni- * peg's defense repeats, the Blue Bombers will be in the Grey « Cup game again but Caigary fans insist their Stamps had a _ tad game and that tomorrow, it will be different. & x x x x 4 « OSHAWA citizens are reminded of the big public meeting 'at the OCVI Auditorium on Sunday afternoon; at two o'clock. {The Oshawa Civic Auditorium Committee wili present their © findings and plans. A model of the proposed structure will {be on display, along with architect's drawings. It's a fine opportunity for John Public to get first-hand information on this city's next project. Thursday's Results Sudbury 6 Fort Wayne 8 Minneapolis 0 Syracuse 8 Ontario Junior WLT- F APt 6 2 2 41 2014 6 2 1 49 3713 § 2.3 41 2213 5 8 1 59 6211 St. Catharines 3 5 3 43 579 Guelph 39 0 36 62 6 | Thursday's Results Guelph 4 Hamilton 7 |St. Catharines 3 Peterborough 5 FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Miami. -- Tommy O'Connor, | 139, Pittsburgh, outpointed Bob) | Allen, 132, Jacksonville, Fla., 8. | Tokyo -- Katsuo Haga, 120, Japan, outpointed Roberto Luna, 118, Mexico, 10. |London 1 Tillsonburg 14 the first-round lead after aon A ag 67 over the St. Lucie Leamington 4 Riverside 2 Thursday in the 72-hole Perry|Country Club course. Vote For Experience ! VOTE AND RE-ELECT GORDON B. ATTERSLEY FOR ALDERMAN A Proven Record of Community Service ! Peterboro Niagara Falls Montreal Hamilton 10 Years Council Experience.! --_-- cunts rervee et! Fourteen Booked ; 1m Gridiron Brawling Dress Shoe Hartt Brentwood--a basic part of the wardrobe of the well dressed man. Always in style for any occasion. A typical Hartt product of distinction. The Smart Wear HARTT finer leathers unsurpassed comfort The game was the fifth con- secutive year St. John's and Eastern High School have played for~the title. St. John's won 20-7. Witnesses said there was evi- dence of drinking among the spectators and some indication of racial conflict. St. John's is predominantly white and East- ern mostly Negro. The fight between opposing players was brief. It started when an Eastern player who had been ejected by officials ran back onto the field and started swinging. The player was subdued by teammates. As soon as the final gun sounded spectators began jump- ing barricades and fences by the hundreds. Police encircled both teams and forced 'their way through the milling crowd into the locker rooms. Police managed to keep the swarming youngsters on the field under control and to clear the stadium. But the fighting erupted outside. One man's face was cut and a young girl was hit with a bot- tle.-In the confusion two per- sons were hit by automobiles. | LOOK-FOR HARTT SHOES AT THESE BETTER STORES COLLINS SHOES Open Friday Night 'Till 9 119 BROCK ST. S., WHITBY DAVIDSON'S SHOE STORE 31 SIMCOE ST. NORTH PHONE 725-3312 simail 668-3476 Seagram's XO CANADIAN WHISKY A RARE OLD DELICATE CANADIAN WHISKY: SPECIALLY MATURED IN OAK CASKS DISTILLED, AGED AND BOTTLED UNDER THE 8 NT OF THE C/ 60 JOSEPH E. SEAGRAM f SONS.LIMITED WATERLOO "ONTARIO: CANADA, DISTILLERS SINCE 1657 > MUU ENY y uy Seagram's | MVE _ te Sure