Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Dec 1962, p. 14

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14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, December 14, 1962 wr %. PAGE GETS TIP FROM REDHEAD GUY MONETTE, House of George Brazeau (right), Kelly Commons page boy in Otta- was at a dinner given in the wa, is taught how it is done parliamentary restaurant by MP and Toronto Maple Thursday night by Steve Otto. Leaf hockey player, Red Kel- Liberal member for York ly, Also tuned in on the-lesson East. {s another page boy, Louis --(CP Wirephoto) By THE CANADIAN PRESS "I think I've finally got this team into the proper attitude," said Boston coach Milt Schmidt above the dressing-room cla- mor. His Bruins had just gained a moral victory by holding Mozt- real Canadiens, the defending Nationa! Hockey League cham- pions, to a 1-1 tie Thursday night, The second-place Detroit Red Wings edged [fifth-place New York 3-2 in the other scheduled game, "Listen to this noise," said Schmidt, "They're talking it up now, on the ice and off, They're starting to enjoy the game. Watson as coach of the last- place Bruins after they had won only one of their first 14 games, "From now on, we won't take any losses without fighting like hell. When I started, they were accepting losses easily, It was just another loss for them." PRAISES KENNEDY Schmidt said one of his strong- est forewards Thursday aight was Forbes. Kennedy, who scored Boston's goal midway through the first period by split- ting Canadiens' defence and beating goalie Jacques Plante from close in, Says Coach Milt, 'Look Well, Bet My Bruins Fight Like--' From then. on, it developed into a goalkeepers duel betwecn Perreault and Plante. Perreault, a chubby, 31-year-old native of Trois-Rivieres, Que., outshone Plante, making 38 saves to Plante's 27. Montreal coach Toe Blake was disgusted with his players after the game. "They played for the tie, 'aad got it by positional hockey. We had a seven-game undefeated string a week ago, and now we can't even beat the last-place team on our own ice." THIRD PLACE RACE play and held on for the vic- tory, leaving the Rangers with- out a win in their last six games. Centre Alex Delvecchio as-| sisted on all three goals to take| the league lead in assists with 20, Linemates Parker MacDon- ald and Gordie Howe and for- ward Floyd Smith did the scor- ing. New York came back with two goals 83 seconds apart late in the first period to make the score 3-2. Defenceman Harry Howell and veteran centre) Bronco Horvath scored, with) Horvath"s goal coming on aj The Dorchester, N.B. resideni| The game moved Canadiens "I thought we skated harder|was acquired 10 days ago in a and backchecked more thantrade with Detroit for forward they did tgnight. Also Bobby|Andre Pronovost. Kennedy was (rookie goalie Bob Perreault)|playing with Detroit's Edmon- made a few keys saves tha! kept/ton farm club in the Western us in there," Hockey League at the time Schmidt took over from Phil] GCjayde Provost, Montreal's "SPORTS MENU "a4 By Geo. H. Campbell yond | SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' ATHLETE OF THE YEAR -- outstanding in any sport, elther as an individual or a contributor to a team, both for Ontario and also for the entire Dominion of Canada -- what {s your choice? Every year -- just when the sportswriters and sportscasters are tangled in tinsel and wrapping paper, ribbons, etc., bogged down with that greetings card bit, or just plain recovering from the rigors of the football season and getting nicely into the thick of hockey, basketball, curling, etc., along comes the ballots for the annual voting. The On- tario Sportswriters and Sportscasters Assoc: conducts the "Ontario" poll, via its active membership and we are asked to vote on three. Wantia know? We voted for Don Jackson, world's champion and greatest figure-skater of all time; Bruce Kidd, the track sensation who again this year toppled records with ease and won a gold medal at the B.E. games; and Bobby Hull, the Point Anne puckster, who scored 50 NHL goals last term, And when it came to. voting for the "outstanding Canadian athlete' -- we still had the same ideas, Mary Stewart, the teen-age swimming marvel from Vancouver, was the only possible choice as Canada's top woman athlete, with Sue Hilton, the 1962 Canadian' golf sen- sation, the only close contender. VOTING FOR "'top team", 'biggest thrill', 'surprise', "disappointment"', "oddity"', "greatest comeback"--all these provide a lot of scope for ideas and opinions, persona! selec- tions because of special interest in certain sports, the amount of interest created, the amount of publicity received, each is a factor in each individual vote, But there will always be this variety because this is what makes sports so popular with so many different groups, Fishermen could probably think up more oddities in five minutes than most sports scribes could remember in a week. And what about those bowling alley marathons, and similar exhibitions of endurance, plus skill? We just had a swell idea--how about this--the list of topics to be voted on, as given above, is the same every year. So we'll in- vite any and all of our readers, to start right out on New Year's Day, to make his or her own listings--and then on De- cember 1st, send in your votes on these various selections. We'll tally them up and use these as our ballot. It could be an interesting hobby for any sports fan--and look at the mem- ory work and mental gymnastics we would avoid! BRIGHT BITS: -- It's not much like horse-racing weather, around these parts, but the "'punters" will be interested to know that already, the number of nominations and interim payments for some of Canada's big stake races, are already s0 much greater than expected that it is expected there will be record purses offered in the major races, next year,... OSHAWA HAWKS are playing St, Thomas Barnes, in senior basketball schedule play, here at Donevan Collegiate tomor- row evening at 7.30 o'clock. We note, from their publicity office that Fred Whalley is back at the helm as coach. We gather that John Newey, who started out in charge of the reins, has either moved away, is too busy or has been re- lieved of his duties. At any rate -- we wish the club's pub- licity department would pass along this information with the same open-book policy as is followed in telling of other facts concerning the team. Sport fans can very quickly get irked or get wrong ideas, if they are not kept fully informed. ..» MICKEY MANTLE has once again been named the top 'slugger' of the American League, with a .605 percentage, to win the title for the second consecutive year. His total of bases included 30 homers, one triple, 15 doubles and 75 singles. He also had the most walks of anybody in the A.L. +++ OVER 21 MILLIONS of football fans watched the Col- lege brand this past season, for a new U.S, record. . . . SAS- KATOON Quakers practically stepped off their plane on to the ice at Stockholm last night and were blanked 7-0 by the Swedish world hockey champions -- who have been training like crazy, to be ready to defend their title, | Canucks Beaten By Swedes 7-0 ---TiockEy SCORES, STANDINGS In Exhibition | STOCKHOLM (AP)--Sweden's world championship hockey team thumped Saskatoon Quak- jers 7-0 Thursday night, handing |the Canadians a solid setback jin the first game of a two-game }exhibition series. The game won the approval of 15,000 cheering Swedish fans. Factors in the lopsided win jwere fatigue the Canadians suf- fered from a long plane flight) Wednesday and difficulty in adapting to European rules, The Swedes, most of them jmembers of the team that |copped the world championship jat Colorado Springs, Colo., Jast | winter, outclassed the Quakers) in every department. The Sas- |katchewan Senior League Quak- jers drew nine penalties to three jfor the Swedes. Centre Nisse Nilsson and Ulf Sterner each scored two goals for the Swedes, singles going to Nicke Johansson, defenceman Karlsson and Mild. TOURNAMENTS $ sil digging right winger, tied it up early in the second period with a screened 25-footer that Per- reault didn't seem to see. into a tie for third place with the idle Toronto Maple Leafs, Each team has 29 points, six behind the first-place Chicago Black Hawks. The Wings' win in Detroit moved them within two points of the first-place Hawks and De- troit has two games in hand. The Wings scored their three goals in the first 10 minutes of | | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | | National League LT F APt $77 60 35) 475 57 33 1310. 3 70 29 pee re 63 29 816 4 Bl 92 20) 315 8 68 102 14) Thursday's Results | Boston 1 Montreal 1 | Chicago |Detroit |Toronto {Montreal New York |Boston |New York 2 Detroit 3 Saturday's Games | New York at. Montreal Boston at Toronto | Chicago at Detroit | Sunday's Games | Montreal at Boston | Toronto at Chicago | Detroit at New York | Eastern Professional | WLT F APt 18 4 3113 7339 15 6 3 87 6933 |Sudbury 1110 4115 106 26| Syracuse 315 5 62° 9133) Thursday's Resuit | |Hull-Ottawa'2 Syracuse 2 | Kingston Hull-Ottawa ET FOR MARCH TORONTO (CP) -- The first] annual national college basket- ball and hockey championships were set tentatively for March 22 at a meeting Thursday of the board of governors of the Canadian Intercollegiate Ath- letic Union. Assumption University of Windsor has been awarded the basketball tournament and Queen's University and _ the Royal Military College will be co-hosts at the hockey tourna- ment at Kingston. Maj. W. J. (Danny) McLeod of RMC, secretary-treasurer of the CIAU, said the board feels should also be awarded next year's tournaments to get their program off and running. The 'meeting was called to discuss how the $18,000 grant from the physical fitness coun- icil would be spent. The CIAU' asked for $59,000 which was to cover national championships, coaching clin- ics, administration and organ- ization and more regional com- petition. Because they didn't get as much as they hoped, the officers decided to use the Tonight's Game Kingston at Sudbury OHA Senior A WLT F APt 14 5 0113 70 28) 12 7 1 93 6225) 12 7 0 85 66 24! 9 9 0 58 7418 810 1 72 7317 118 0 59133 2 Thursday's Resuit Windsor 0 Kitchener 3 Tonight's Games Kitchener at Chatham Sarnia at Woodstock OHA Junior A WLT F 2 6 67 4 65 4°77 5 78 Windsor Chatham Woodstock Galt Kitchener Sarnia API 39 24| 44 22 65 20 77:19 87 17 90 8 Montreal Peterboro Niagara Falls Hamilton -- St. Catharines 5 66 Guelph 2.40 Thursday's Results Guelph 1 Peterborough 7 St, Catharines 3 Hamilton 5 Tonight's Games St. Catharines at Niagara Falls Peterborough at Guelph the CIAU. is not connected in any way with the University of British Columbia's plans to rep- resent Canada in the 1964 Ol- ympiec hockey competition. "We're interested in interna- tional competition for the fu- ture," said Maj. McLeod, "'but only when the Canadian repre- sentative has been decided as a result of national competi- tion." | Next year the CIAU hopes to add a national cross-country championship and two footbal] money for national competi- tions, NOT WITH VBC PLAN Assumption, Queea's and RMC They also let it b2 known that| bowl game on the east coast, bowl games, They are considering one probably hooking up with the power play. The Wings forced Ranger) goalie Gump Worsley to make 38 saves, nine more than De- 'troit netminder Terry Sawchuk. In the next NHL: games Sat- urday, the Rangers visit Mont- real, the Bruins are in Toron.o and the Wings play in Chicago. H-0 Canadiens In 2-2 Sawolf With Syracuse | | SYRACUSE, N.Y. (CP)--Hull-} Ottawa Canadiens and Syracuse) Braves battled to a 2-2 tre Thursday night in a clean, tast| Eastern Professional Hockey League game; The teams exchanged: goals} in each of the first and third periods, Hec Lalande and Al Caron were the Syracuse scorers and Jacques Laperriere and Chuck Hamilton, both de- fencemen, scored for Hull-Ot- tawa, The yictory increased Cana- diens' second-place lead to seven points over third-place Sudbury Wolves. The Canadiens with 31 points, trail the league- leading Kingston Frontenacs by eight. Syracuse is fourth with| - | are wearing Farnsworth Can Put Spark In Tired Old Plugs NEW YORK (AP)--Is your horse hurting? Is he fretting, pawing his little stall, off his oats? Is he shivering these cold mornings, generally run down, kind of peaked looking, and running like he's got an anvil tied to each hoof? Have you caught him read- ing travel folders lately? Do you have a horse? If you do, and his symp- toms are showing, a neat brochure that tumbled ou! of Thursday's mail might have the answer. Why not send your horse to | Florida for the winter? . The people at Farnsworth Farms, Ocala, Fla., say they have just the place for tired horses. It looks like a beiter dea! than people get. There are doctors for eld horses, teach- ers for young ones and recre ation directors for them all. For girl horses, the brochure | says there are plenty of single boy horses around, and a so- cial director on duty. Cartoons show happy horses running (they're wearing track suits), playing tennis in nifty sports togs, and esting young lady horses (the boys tail coats, the girls wedding gowns). It all looks pretty inviting, to a horse. And there is no mention of surly waiters and bellhops with their hands out for tips. REMEMBER WHEN .. .? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bill Cook, who later' be- came famous on New York Rangers' forward line with brother Bun Cook and Frank Boucher, scored three goals when Saskatoon defeated Victoria 4-1 in a Western Holkey League game 38 years ago today. Bill joined the Rangers in their first Season in 1926 and retired 10 years later with a life- time NHL record of 228 goals. rae as they whipped them CIVIL SERVICE LOOP Firefighters Envoy Food Service showed remarkably well against the "hot" Firefighters club, despite) their 3-2 loss. Firefighters took' a two-goal lead in the game in the first period, however the Food men put up a fierce battle and final ly tied- the score early in the second stanza. 1 The Firemen then, midway through the final period, scored the big one, to eke out the win, Welden, Romanuk and Myles were the Firemen's scorers.) while Milne and Delves shared the honors for Envoy Food Ser) vice. TEACHERS -- FCOTES Teachers had no trouble at all in their victory over Footes Fly- ers in the second game of the Two goals in the first period by Ritchie, and Long and two more in the second period, by Brother Martin and Rodgers, gave the Teachers their goals while MacDonnell scored the Nip Envoy; Teachers Step On Foote's CIVIL SERVICE NOTES -- The stars in the Firefighter Envoy game were Garrard and Hubble of the Firemen and Envoy's Bobby Delves .. In the Teachers Foote's game, Teachers' Long and Hogg were chosen 1st and 2nd while Marty Mueller, of the Flyers, was chosen 3rd. WLTFA Pts, Oshawa Times 5 Firefighters 5 Teachers 3 Police Assoc. 3 Envoy Foods 1 1 1 3 3 5 Foote's Flyers 1 5 PICK TOP LINEMAN NEW YORK (AP)--Lee Roy Jordan, Alabama's tough, val ented centre, was named the nation's outstanding college football lineman Thursday in an Associated Press poll of spoits writers and broadcasters, Jor- dan, a 207-pound all-American who hopes for a career in pro- fessional football, was pressed in the voting only by Bobby Flyers' lonely tally. Bell, Minnesota's giant tackle. will FRI., D ONTARIO MOT: 140 BOND WEST ONTARIO MOTOR SALES" CLOSE to allow the staff to attend their ANNUAL CHRISTMAS BANQUET LTD. EC. 14th at 6 p.m. OR SALES LTD. 725-6507 11 on three wins and five ties. Only three penalties were called during the game with Syracuse receiving two of the minors, None of the penalties figured in the scoring. First National Hockey And Cage Championships Atlantic Bowl which is already, established, and an east-west| bowl game. | Further in the future, they hope to add swimming and track and field to their list of} national championships | There are four college asto-| ciations in the national body aad each will be represented in the hockey and basketba!l tournaments. | The four are the Maritimes Intercollegiate. Athletic Associa- tions, the Ontario-Quebee Ath- letic Association (more com- monly known as the Inter-col- legiate Senior League). and the Western Canadian Intercollegi- ate Athletic Association. cs Beautify your home the modern, functional. way; clean, durable last a housetime. Inquire now. ASPHALT DRIVEWAYS SCUTTLE WING PL AN EDMONTON (CP)--A trade engineered by Detroit Red Wings has been wrecked by three players from Edmonton Flyers of the Western Hockey League and raised questions about the future of professional hockey in Edmonton. Forward Chuck Holmes, the Flyers team captain and lead- ing scorer, forward Warren Hynes and defenceman Lou burgh Hornets of the American) League, spoiling a four-for-four| trade arranged by Detroit of the National League, parent! club of both teams, | In a telephone interview from Detroit, -Red Wings general |manager Sid Abel said he has jno alternative but to suspend Trio Of Hockey Players Stay Firm On West Soil e 0Ulthe three Edmonton players to Marcon refused to shift to Pitts-| 5 Wings are disappointed with the club's showing, "'but at no time has Detroit thought of pulling out of Edmonton." | at a meeting with Rayner Thursday to go to Pittsburgh. In return, Rayner will get Pitts- burgh defenceman John Mis- zuk. | The other Pittsburgh playcrs| who were to move to Edmonton are forwards Ray Ross and Norm Corcoran and _ defence- man Jack Price. Abel said he will try to trade "ddie Shore, owner of Spring- field Indians of the AHL, in a three-for-one trade involving an unidentified Springfield defence- man. |pieces."' If authorities got rid WANTS GAY CHURCHES WORCESTER, England (CP) The Bishop of Worcester says churches should be bright, gay and warm and not "museum of any dingyness in their churches they would get bigger congregations. IN OSHAWA Sales & Service 353 MITH Asked about published reports from Calgary that Detroit is planning to drop its suppert for} the Flyers, Abel said the Red! KING Ww. PORT OPEN EVENINGS 9311 \the thfee players. | | This raised' a serious problem \for Flyers coach Charlie Ray-| jner, who will be short three of |his best players, has no replace- j|ments and whose club is lag- | ging in third place in the WHL"s |four-team Northern Division. | AGREES TO MOVE Defenceman Keith (Knobby) | Walsh, fourth Edmonton player \involved in the trade, agreed Tourney Delayed By | 22 Degree Weather . AVON PARK, Fla. (AP)-- Mason Rudolph and Kathy) Whitworth shot a two-under-par| 70 Thursday to take the first- round lead in the $30,000. scotch mixed foursome golf tourna- mem being played over two! Highland County courses. The first round of the 72-hole alternate-shot tournament was) delayed three hours because of| the 22degree: weather early in the morning. | Two teams with 71s, one shot) A The Subject for Conversation Handcrafter --- modern shapes -- featherweight, made from the finest kernel briar. Making pipe smoking.a new experience, JOKELAND Pipesmokers .. . 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