Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Dec 1962, p. 10

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10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, December 29, 1962 oo ey tet en eterno Kidd, Crothers Sight Trouble In Georgia Sun NEW ORLEANS (CP)--Can- ada's Bruce Kidd and Bill Crothers will have more than Monday when they bring the dq sioner ssisigeaaae hot weather to contend with EAA AAT APOSTLE IAA SPORTS CALENDAR SUNDAY HOCKEY OHA Junior "A" Metro League -- Brampton vs Marl- boros, at 2.00 p.m. and Oshawa Generals vs Knob Hill Farms, at 3.30 p.m.; Both games at To- ronto Maple Leaf Gardens. Campbell Clips Gadsby's Wings To Tune Of $200 MONTREAL (CP)--Veteran defenceman Bill Gadsby of De- troit Red Wings has been fined $200 by president Clarence Campbell of the National Bruce Bradley's entry was the only one of 12 rinks to win all three games, when the Osh. awa Golf Club held its first Box. ing Day Bonspiel, on Wednes- SBR, lage So Ae toon sent SFT NE iE TL ODA AE A ent ar oak rhea The full entry of rinks enjoy- ed an excellent buffet, between their second and third games. Dr. Doug Langmaid, chairman LEAS EE ARON! FONE. Seprents: Boxing Day Bonspiel | At Oshawa Golf Club Goldman, Re Venaaroor Merv ' Walter ise hae : skip, 8 i' University of Toronto colors to OHA Junior "BY" Metro and his committee, conducted i ' is + 7 4 : & GORDIE STILL POPULAR IN OTTAWA the Sugar Bowl track meet. The 19-year-old Kidd will meet three U.S, collegiate run- ners in the three-mile event, in- cluding Dale Story of Oregon State, the 1961 cross-countr: titlist of the U.S. National Col- legiate Athletic Association. rothers, who has entered the mile, will have to best nine others, one of whom is Tom O'Hare of Loyola in Chicago. O'Hare has to his credit this year a 4:01.7 mile plus the NCAA cross-country title. Kidd has expressed apprehen- sion about running in the hot Louisiana winter, a far cry from what he's used to in Tor- onto, Even so it seems likely that the Sugar Bowl meét rec- ord of 14:13 for the three miles will fall, Kidd's best time for the dis- tance is a full 56 seconds faster. And the strong competition should encourage a fast. pace. Crothers holds the Canadian 880-yard record of one minute, 49 seconds, Kidd is the three- mile champion of the U.S. Am- ateur Athletic Union with' a time of 13:35. Gordie Howe of Detroit where his team played an ex- Red Wings signs atitographs hibition game against Hull- for young fans at Ottawa Ottawa Canadiens. Howe scor- ed one goal in last night's game, but Red Wings were defeated 6-2. (CP Wirephoto) League -- Weston vs Bowman. ville Pic-O-Mats, at Bowman. ville Community Arena, 3.00 p.m UAW League -- Tony's Re- freshments vs Merchants, at 11.00 a.m, and Vendomatics vs Bad Boy, at 12.30 p.m.; Both games at Bowmanville Com. munity Arena, North Plant League -- Plaza Foods vs Acadians, at 1.00 p.m.; Kinloch's vs P. and K, Welding; at 2.30 p.m. and Sub. way Lunch vs Corvair, at 4,00 p.m. All games at Port Perry Arena, Oshawa - Courtice League -- Beaupre's vs Tolmison's at Whitby Arena, 4:30 p.m, MONDAY No games scheduled. BASKETBALL SCORES By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | National Association |Boston 121 Cincinnati 113 San Francisco 124 Syracuse 117 Hockey League, it was an- nounced Friday. The announcement said Gadsby was fined for his part in a third-period altercation during a game against the Rangers in New York Dec. 16, won by Rangers 5-2, Gadsby got into an argument with referee John Ashley after Andy Hebenton scored for New York at 17:27 of the third pe- riod. He was given a 10-minute misconduct penalty and a match misconduct. As the misconduct nalty carried an automatic $25 fine and the match misconduct $50, the additional fine imposed by Campbell brought the total strike against Gadsby's pocket- book to $275. The league announcement said 'only team captains or al- \ternate captains can _ protest |referees' decisions. Gadsby, be- ing neither, theréfore got a mis- he winners, Jack Kesslér, Lloyd Short, Frank Simpson and Bruce Bradley, skip, com- piled a total of 22 plus to be the initial winners of what will now be an annual Boxing Day feature at OGC, : Doug Langmaid and his rink rink, with 10 plus 2. High one-game winners were the curlers under skip Dr. Ralph Cox, who nosed out their rivals, with a plus count of four. points, |°" emerged as the high two-game ah winners, with a score of 15 plug|/oh", Kessler 1, followed by Dr. Gord Hare's fre hat the successful event. naa are the complete re. First Geme MH. Smith, . Ser 'en Peterson, Boy TO vs Re White, as is, 'ons, Doug Langmaia, Jack Gl ale, i ck Glover, skip, 6. Jack Glover, A. A D. Longmaid, Hore, 9; skip Second 10; 4 renst 6; # Rov Cn phens 8 Wh; ; ' ' bil Jack By RON ANDREWS scoring while he's off are 66 Markers Counted When Rearguard Off conduct penalty when he ar- gued with the referee and a| When a National Hockey match misconduct when he kept|League player gets a penalty on arguing. 'the chances of the opposition Doug Mohns twice apiece Pat Stapleton and Westfall once each. other goal was scored with forward Murray greater if he's a defenceman, Including games of Christmas night this season, there were 99 a PATRICK REPLACED 'SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' NON-CONFORMIST ? If a man lives in and enjoys a Demo- ,eratic way of life, if he raises his voice (one of the free- 'doms attributed to Democracy) he is apt to be promptly squelched, or at least given a label, as being a communist, a rebel, a guy with an axe to grind, an anti-society personage, 'or in the most lenient of all criticisms, be termed a poor 'loser, We would dislike qualifying for any of these titles, "but if the more tolerant would like to designate us as a non- sconformist, then we would not resent that term too much. 'And so, in spite of being a firm convert to the freedom of the 'press, free speech, rule of the majority, etc., we would like, cat this time, to voice a complaint to the selection of Bruce Kidd as 'Canada's outstanding individual athlete of the year'. : Votes were cast more than ten days ago and the results were «known, to voting members, about three days ago. We didn't = want to "beat the gun" and we had to be fair to Bruce Kidd-- 'he was, after all, voted in, by the majority of ballots, as Can- *ada's top athlete of 1962.. But now that duties have been ful- «filled, we would like to insist that this was one time the ma- 'jority was wrong. We are not crying 'sour grapes' nor are «we beating the drums after the parade is over, just because "it was an Oshawa athlete who didn't get named to the No. 1 * position -- but we say now, said it as we voted, and will say > it as long as we can find a typewriter that works -- in 1962 -- * Don Jackson, of Oshawa, World's Champion Figure Skater, the » best of all time, -- was really Canada's No. l-athlete of the . year. ' x x x x BRUCE KIDD himself, stole a lot of our thunder. Rec- ognized as one of Canada's fine-minded, well-educated and highly ethical athletes, Bruce, in his own statement, came out with some of the more solid arguments as to why he . shouldn't have been "'the people's choice' and because he didn't hesitate to voice such modest opinions -- we, or nobody else, can fault him for the result of the poll. Kidd said -- and we quote -- "I figured Don Jackson might win it. After all, he's the best in the world and the British Empire Games is hardly in the same class as a world championship'. Yep! Bruce Kidd said it himself. He added one other very pertinent * point -- "How can you compare one sport to another. It's interesting but not necessarily a measure of achievement. * For instance, I might set a world's record next year but some- body, with a better Cinderella story or more glamor, might win the poll'. He also pointed out that in his sport, he is active 12 menths of the year, while Jackson and Bobby Hull, No. 2 choice, are active only in the winter. We say, and we repeat, we do not for a moment want to mark down Kidd's 'amazing track achievements of this past year, but like him, we wonder if maybe the poll is unfair, because the vote is taken, only once, at the end of the year. Maybe, as they do in the NHL, there should be two sets of votes, cast during a * calendar year. e x x x x . DON JACKSON won the world's championship, in figure- . skating and he did it right in the back-yard of the figure- * skating kings. In hockey, as our Galt, Kitchener, Saskatoon and other Canadian representatives suffer defeat, we cry, "'let *'em come over here and play our rules -- we'll show 'em ! Don Jackson did just that -- he won a world's championship, ' under the other guy's rules -- and he did it right in Czechslo- * vakia -- and how did the Czech fans behave ? They came out of their seats, about 16,000 of them -- and stayed standing for ; over 15 minutes for our Canadian's free-style performance, » cheering him wildly and with unbound enthusiasm -- a real acclaim to a champion. The judges didn't even need to vote -- everybody knew the answer! And this was in an individual » Sport -- and after all, the Canadian sportswriters and sports- ' scribes were asked to vote on the outstanding "individual" athlete. On this item alone, Bobby Hull couldn't truly qualify -- brilliant as his performance in the NHL proved to be. Let's * face it -- he scored a lot of goals to achieve his record, on the » skill and work of his teammates. We do not criticize his claim } to greatness -- but he had help, his was part of a team effort. » Kidd and Jackson had to go it alone! . | x x x . WE SUGGEST (we are not making any charges) that be- * cause figure-skating, in the minds of many sports figures, is } still not considered a "'he-man sport'; because Toronto has ; more votes than anybody else and because British Columbia iis more track-minded than most provinces, that Don Jackson + got "short shift" -- plus the fact, the voting was done two ; weeks ago, Jackson made his mark nearly 10 months ago -- 'all this added up to his being rated only 3rd. Don Jackson » made Canada's Sport Hall of Fame for his feat, he received an 'honor equivalent to a "Royal Command Performance", he *won a World's Championship in a difficult single-competitor = sport -- and he didn't get as much acclaim as Barbara Ann * Scott received for a similar or even less athletic performance. » He earned unqualified claim to the title of "'the world's great- : est figure-skater of all time" -- and Canadian sports voters * rated him only third. THIS, my friendlies, could be exactly « what's wrong with 'sports in Canada' -- we don't recognize the > best we have, nor the best we are -- even when it's been prov: sen. On behalf of all of us, who in this community are so + proud to be able to say that Don Jackson is a 100 per cent Osh- t awa homebrew -- we repeat, in 1962 he wasn't just Canada's * foremost athlete -- he was "'the world's best'. The defense + rests! 2 | | HOCKEY SCORES ___ STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Eastern Professional LT F APt Hull-Ottawa 21 6 3119 8445 Kingston 1811 3127 100 39 Sudbury 1412 5139 130 33 Sudbury 1412 5 139 i30 33 |Syracuse 517 6, 8211516 | Friday's Resulis |Kingston 2 Syracuse 4 Hull-Ottawa 6 Sudbury 4 Tonight's Game Syracuse at Kingston Sunday's Game Hull-Ottawa at Syracuse American League Eastern Division WLT F 1611 6 97 1613 3106 1614 1113 973 Springfield 1512 3120 99 33 Baltimore 1415 2 95107 30 Western Division LT F APt 1811 1100. 93 37 1115 4104 105 26 Cleveland 1118 4100 134 26 Pittsburgh 1018 2 84 9722 Friday's Result Pittsburgh 1 Baltimore 2 Games Tonight Baltimore at Cleveland Quebec at Hershey Buffalo at Pittsburgh Rochester at Springfield | Sunday's Games \Quebec at Baltimore \Cleveland at Buffalo |Rochester at Providence | OHA Senior A WLT | Windsor 19 6 1163 9539 | Woodstock 18 8 0131 9436 |Chatham 178 1127 7835 |Galt 914 0 6710518 | Kitchener 814 2 85 10018 |Sarnia 223 0 87187 4 | Friday's Results Sarnia 3 Chatham 11 Windsor 5 Woodstock 6 Sunday's Games |Chatham at Windsor |Kitchener at Sarnia OHA Junior A WLT Montreal 12°53 Niagara Falls 12 Peterboro 11 Hamilton 10 St. Catharines 612 6 7611218 Guelph 417 4 7212712 Friday's Results Montreal 4 Niagara Falls § Hamilton 9 Guelph 4 Games Tonight |Guelph at Peterborough |Montrea] at St. Catharines Metro Toronto Jr. A Marlboros 4 Neil McNeil 3 |Brampton 4 Knob Hill 1 | OHA Junior B |Waterloo 4 Stratford 5 |Dixie 4 Weston 4 |Windsor N and D 4 Dresden 3 Ottawa District Jr. A Smiths Falls 6 Thurso 1 |Montagnards 5 Hull 2 Primrose 5 Arnprior 2 Manitoba Junior Brandon 5 Winnipeg M. 0 | Saskatchewan Junior |Saskatoon 1 Melville 7 |Estevan 3 Regina 2 Saskatchewan Senior Regina 2 Yorkton 11 | Western League |Spokane 7 Edmonton 1 Seattle 2 Vancouver 4 Los Angeles 2 San Francisco 5 stern League Knoxville 3 Philadelphia 2 Charlotte 2 Greensboro 4 | Northern Ontario &r Abitibi 0 Kapuskasing 2 International League Minneapolis 4 Port Huron ¢ Fort Wayne 5 Omaha 4 Exhibition Univ. of Alberta 4 Denver 1i APt 91 38 96 35 Quebec Providence Hershey Buffalo Rochester F APt 6 95 6230 5100 75 29 6 80 5728 7 5 9 5100 9025 | Brawlers Suspended Pending OHA Hearing | ORILLIA (CP)--Two players have been suspended pending a hearing by the president of the Ontario Hockey Association into a fight during the second |period in a game here Thursday jnight. Brad Graham of Orillia Ter. jriers and Fraser Dunn of Mid. jland Flyers were each assessed major penalties and match pen- alties for their part in the jfracas which occurred as the teams were coming off the ice. The fight continued in the exit to the dressing rooms. j Following the filing of referee Danny Poland's report, OHA business manager Bill Hanley ordered the suspension. ; FINES GADSBY Pt By THE CANADIAN PRESS National Hockey League fans \had a lot of news to mull over today, even though no games were played Friday night. The biggest development came from New York, where the fifth - place Rangers an- nounced George (Red) Sulll- van, who left the team a player a year and a half ago, has re- turned as coach. | The fiery redhead took over jcoaching duties from: Murray |\(Muzz) Patrick, Rangers vice- president and general mana- |ger, | In Detroit, manager .. coach Sid Abel of the Red Wings said goalie Terry Sawchuk will be in the nets tonight when the team plays Canadiens in Mont- real, Defenceman Marcel Prono- vost, who missed the Wings' game. Wednesday in Toronto with a pulled stomach muscle, will play tonight, Val Fonteyne,| the Wings' injured penalty-| killer, will be replaced by Bo} Elik, a 33-year-old left winger} with Detroit's Edmonton farm| club of the Western Hockey League. And in Montreal, president bell slapped a $200 fine on de- NHL Promise Liston He Will Fight In Near Future NEW YORK (AP)--Promoter iTom Bolan had good news Fri- day for\ heavyweight champion Sonny Liston--he is going to get |his money soon and a rematch jwith Floyd Patterson is close ito the signing stage. Bolan, attorney and president of Championship Sports Incor- porated, said "everything should be resolved in the next jcouple of days" on the title |fight in either Baltimore or Las {Vegas for March or April. Bolan said he had a meeting with government attorneys |Thursday night and was told jthe money held up by the gov- jernment from the first fight will be released soon. | "About a million and a half dollars has been tied up," said Bolan. Liston has more than $200,000 due and he had told Bolan 'no money, no fight." "He'll get the money before the fight,"' said Bolan. | SPORTS BRIEFS TO DEFEND TITLE MANILA (AP) -- Promoter Lope Serreal confirmed a New York report Friday that Flash Elorde of Manila will defend his |world junior lightweight title jagainst Johnny Bizzaro of Erie, Pa., in the Philippine capital. But the promoter, who is Elorde's manager and father- in-law, said the date would be |Feb, 16 instead of Jan. 16. ASSURES AUSSIE FINAL MIAMI BEACH, Fila, (AP)-- Tn just 65 minutes, Anthony Roche of Australia defeated To- maz Koch, Brazil's best junior prospect, 6-3, 6-2, in Friday's semi-final round of the Orange Bowl tennis' tournament's 18- and-under division. Geoffrey Pollard, No. 3 seeded player from Australia, defeated sec- ond-seeded Charles Pasarell. of Puerto Rico, 6-2, 6-4, to assure = all-Australian final Satur- ay. RIDING TEACHER DIES SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)-- Ephriam Foster Graham, for- mer riding instructor at West Point and a member of the 1912 Olympic riding team, died|Bombers who made a runaway|complete figure could not be! Tuesday night at the age of 81 = Rie suffered at polo led|again beat Tiger-Cats in t he|tration deadline. retirement in 1933. fenceman Bill Gadsby of the Red Wings for pushing and ar- guing with réferee John Ashley in a 'game in New York Dee. 16. | Meanwhile, Rangers' Andy Bathgate and Toronto's Frank Mahovlich will be battling in weekend games not only for the league scoring leadership, but for a $500 bonus from the |league as well. The NHL announced earlier this week the player leading the scoring race at the end of 35 games will get a $500 bonus. Another $500 bonus will be given to the player leading at the end of the season, who will also get the regular $1,000 award. So with another game to play --against Canadiens in New York Sunday--Bathgate has a one-point edge over Mahovlich. He has 37 points to Mahovlich's 36. Blueshirts Call Redhead To Take Coaching Reins The Big M has two more games to play to reach the 35- geme mark. Leafs play host to hicago Black Hawks tonight in their only weekend game. Tor- onto and Chicago are tied for first place in the league stand- ings with 40 points, two more than third-place Detroit. In the only other weekend game, last-place Boston plays in Chicago Sunday night. REPLACES SCHMIDT Sullivan, 33, comes to the Rangers from a position as playing-coach with Baltimore Clippers of the American Hockey League. He is the sec- ond new coach of the cam- paign. Milt Schmidt replaced Phil Watson at the helm of the last-place Bruins in mid- No- vember, The salary terms and dura- tion of Sullivan's contract were not announced. Sullivan said Friday at a press conference he plans no immediate changes in person. nel. "What I want is for them to play a little rougher--play a tougher checking game," said the red-headed firebrand. Sullivan started out in the Boston Bruins organization, and with Hershey in the American League in 1953-54 he set a séa- }son scoring record of 119 points. He was sold to the Chicago Black Hawks, where he played two years. Patrick traded Wally Herge- sheimer, a right winger, for Sullivan in a straight swap in the summer of 1956. Sullivan was player-coach of the now- disbanded Kitchener - Waterloo Beavers of the Eastern Profes- sional League last season, and the team finished third. He is married, has three children and lives in Peterborough. Bombers Chosen As Outstanding Team By Clarence Camp: Slim 4-Vote Margin By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Writer | TORONTO (CP) -- Winnipeg |Blue Bombers, who just made lit to the Grey Cup final and |then hung on for a cliff-hang- jing, fog-shrouded victory, have squeezed through for additional honors. They've been named the outstanding team in the country, but only after a real fight with Toronto Maple Leafs, Stanley Cup champions. The Bombers won out in the 28th annual Canadian Press year-end poll of sports editors and. broadcasters, The selectors were asked by CP to name the three outstand- ing teams -- any sport, profes- sional or amateur, in order-- and the Bombers got the nod by the narrowest of margins. Com- puted on a 3-2-Ibasis for the first three places, they com- piled 295 points against 282 'or Leafs. Seventeen others were jmentioned but they were no- where. VOTING CLOSE The Bombers, who capitalized by Harvey Wylie of Calgary Stampeders to win the Western | Football Conference playoff and jthen, practically torn apart by injuries, beat Hamilton Tiger- Cats 28-27 in the two-part cup classic, couldn't have had it much closer in the poll. | They received 58 first-place votes of the record-breaking 156 ballots cast. That was just four more than the Leafs received. They also got 53 second-place votes against 48 by Leafs and 15 third-place against 24 by the hockey titleholders. Third place went to a pair of figure skaters, Otto and Maria Jelinek of Bronte, Ont., who dazzled competitors from 16 countries with a world-winning performance at Prague, Czech. oslovakia, last spring. They picked up 96 points on 12 first jplaces, 16 second and 28 third. Fourth place went to the Re- gina curling rink skipped by Ernie Richardson thet won the Canadian title in Kitchener last March and then went to Scot- land and made a clean sweep in the world championship. Here again, it was close. ~ The Richardsons just beat out Calgary Stampeders, 61-57. The |Stamps received 10 votes for on a last-second misjudged play A They got out of the Calgary series in poor physical shape. They arrived in Toronto, scene of the cup.classic, with a few walking wounded and with ace defensive half Gordie Rowland unable to start. Things, indeed, }were black. "We'll whomp the hell out of the West,"' boasted Ticat coach Jim Trimble and many experts were inclined to agree. With fog hanging just over the field, the two teams 'or all but nine minutes and 29 seconds on Sat- urday, Dec. 1, before commis- sioner Sydney Halter called a halt to the proceedings with Bombers shead 28-27, and or- dered the teams to continue from that point the following day. The crippled Bombers held on to their single-point lead in the scoreless second part of the fi- nal for their fourth cup decision in five appearances since 1957. This was the ammunition the selectors needed to pick the Bombers. MONTREAL (CP) -- Donald Quebec Amateur Hockey Asso- ciation, said Friday a new reg- istration fee for minor players is "a sort of enforced subscrip- tion" to a new mothly publica- tion put out by the Canadian teur Hockey A iation He said complaints about it have come mainly from district convenors or organizers how- ever, and not from the teams themselves. Some. of the convenors, who organize league schedules and collect the players' registration cards in their districts, "'don't like the extra work involved in collecting the fees and compil- ing the mailing list for the mag. azine." . MacDonald said there has been "some discontent and some dropouts' as a result 0 the new fee, designed in part to cover a 12-month subscrip- tion to a new CAHA monthly -- called Hockey Can- a However, he denied earlier reports that at least half the minor league teams in Quebec have dropped their affiliation with the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association. FEWER REGISTERED He said registrations "may be running somewhat behind jlast year's total, but I would \be very surprised if we have less than 15,000 players regis- |tered."" Last year there were 17,216) Registration Fee Buys Publication bers scored against short- anded teams, Defencemen were in the penalty box for 66 of those goals. And' the situa- tion prevailed despite the fact more than half the 1,800-odd minutes in penalties went to forwards, With a choice of 10 or 11 for- wards; some of them penalty- killing Bg mei a coach sel- dom finds trouble putting fresh mén on the ice when one of the front-liners gets the gate. But with defencemen it's a different story. A coach is usually restricted to five defence players, of whom only four may be regu- lars. When one is penalized it usually means someone has to go back on the ice without suf- ficient rest from his last hitch. This tends to make the dé- fensive unit a little weaker and more susceptible to the opposi- tion's power play. | BOSTON HIT HARDEST | Boston Bruins found penalties to their defencemen most costly. They were victims of goals on 16 penalties, 15 of them being served by defence- men. , Ted Green, Irv Spencer and Warren Godfrey were off three times each, Leo Boivin and Oliver off. New York Rangers have the best penalty-killing record with only 12 goals against them when they've been short a man. But on six it was defenceman Albert Langlois in the penalty box and on another three oc- casions it was Doug Harvey. Of the 14 goals scored against Toronto Maple Leafs > durin penalties, 10 have been wit defence players in the box, Carl Brewer was off for four, Kent Douglas and Bobby Baun twice each and Tim Horton and Alan Staniey once each, Another was scored while pen- alty - killing forward George Armstrong was off, League badman Howie Young, with 107 minutes, was in the penalty box on seven oc- casions when the opposition scored against Detroit Red Wings and every team in the league has been able to capital- ize at east once on Young's absences, HAWKS BUCK TREND Detroit has given up 19 goals during penalties, 12 with de fencemen oft. Bill Gadsby, with three, Marcel Pronovost and Doug Barkley with one each, Of Montreal Canadiens' were the others. 16, they were the victims of i with defencemen serving time --Jean - Guy Talbot and Lou Judge Rules NBC Has Right To "Black Out": _ NEW YORK (AP)--A federal judge ruled Friday the National Broadcasting Company has the right to "black out" the New York metropolitan area Sunday during the National Footbail League championship game at Yankee Stadium between Green Bay Packers and New York Giants, Three fans had sought an in- junction to force NBC to lift the local blackout of the game. They contended the action vi- olated their constitutional rights and the anti-trust laws. Judge Edward Weinfeld wrote in a 17-page decision: Fontinato four each, Tom John- son twice and Jean Gauthier once. Chicago Black Hawks are ng only exception. They were the most penalied team and also ad most goals scored against them while short- handed. But of the 22, defence- men were off for only nine. On another occasion, how- ever, Eric Nésterenko, a for- ward who sometimes handles penalty-killing chores, and de- fenceman Wayne Hillman were off together. And another time Reg Fleming, one of the Hawks' regular penalty-killers, was in he box. Al Macneil, th ee, Pierre Pilote, two, Elmer Vasko, Hill. man and Jack Evans, oné each, were the Chicago defencemen off when opposing teams scored. "Undoubtedly, plaintiffs and millions of other football fans| within the 75-mile restricted area eagerly desire to see Sun- day's championship game in the comfort and warmth of their homes. FROM THE LATIN The world mob was originally a slang word derived from the Latin mobile vulgus--meaning excited crowd, "But their preferences cannot overcome the rights of these defendants, as authorized by Congress, to impose the local area restriction, believing as they do that serves their eco- nomic interests, however ill- advised the public may view their policy." 25 cents each for players in bantam, midget and juvenile ranks, covering the 12-18 age group. For players under 12, the pee-wee and mosquito cat- egories, the fee was optional. "'Let's not kid ourselves, it is a sort of enforced subscrip- tion,"' he said, 'but the fee is little enough for the services that players in the minor jleagues get." |. MEANWHILE EDMONTON (CP)--Art Pot- ter, president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association, said Friday a Montreal report that minor league teams have left the CAHA because of a dis- cord arising from player-regis- tration fees does not "jibe with information we have received." Potter said here that minutes of a Quebec Amateur Hockey Association meeting Dec. 15 in- dicated the matter had been settled "to the pleasure of all district minor leagues." He said any team can registr- jas an affiliate with the CAH jand as such its players are nu. individually registered. In such jcases it is a team decision whether or not it subscribed to the magazine. Potter agreed with Donald MacDonald, secretary - regis- trar of the Québec association, that the report of.a wholesale withdrawal was far out of liné. | 1 | \first place against only six for players registered with the Que- the Richardsons who made up bec Minor Hockey Association, | for this with a big bulge forjan affiliate of the QAHA and| second- and third-place choices.|/CAHA. | It. was sweet victory for the| MacDonald said this year's) of the poll in 1961 when they|known before the Jan, 25 regis- ORGANIST LILA TREDWELL Appearing Nightly GENOSHA HOTEL lcup final. seanitieeennaiiemaianie AUTO - LIFE - FIRE McMURTRY INSURANCE EST, 1913 723-3722 21 King St. W. oneanaana SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. RUSS'S CITIES SE 767 PARK RD. $. & CORDOVA RD. BISSONETTE'S SHELL STATION 381 KING ST. Ww. DURNO'S SUPERTEST STATION 574 KING ST. EAST BILENDUKE'S ESSO STATION 1004 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH COOPER'S TEXACO STATION 410 RITSON R SPUR OIL 78 BOND ST, WEST BILL'S WHITE ROSE STATION 352 WILSON DRAGOMOTZ B.A. STATION 136 KING ST. WEST RVICE STATION (OAD NORTH STATION RD. SOUTH MONTY'S B.A. STATION 284 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH ROBINSON'S B.P. STATION 374 RITSON RD. SOUTH The new registration fee was aeeeeome eens A jeremapipeirenet: Speen ah veer

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