Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Mar 1963, p. 15

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Fn Wee . ¥ ey me Pee ee ee PPR Ce Ore ewer ere PPT OPT FT REMEMBER WHEN ...? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Knocked down twice in the first round Floyd Pat- terson came back to knock out Sweden's Ingemar Jo- hansson in the sixth round and retain his world heavy- weight title two years ago today at Miami Beach, Fla. Johansson had seemingly FOR BANTAM GRADS Plan Oshawa And District Ladies Softball Leque game leads into thi cond|_. Due to the initiative of Frank The ODLSL's initial meeting Mages of Shele' twro-out-of three Henderson, an attempt to stimu-| was not held until February and fn fo tbe "4° od" ny eae, rote Seago Cones fd Ko Ushawa Church Hockey e , ¢|edge th section tiles. tion of an Oshawa and District/S08e © poco new local league Christ Church, King St. Teams Win Openers Christ Memorial Church and THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, March 13, 1963 18 BROWN'S; LUMBER a SUPPLIES "DO-IT-YOURSELF _ HEADQUARTERS" NEW HOMES & HOME IMPROVEMENTS FULL LINE OF BUILDING MATERIALS 725-4704 436 RITSON N. Marciano's Trainer Says Cassius Clay Like An 'Old-Timer | NEW YORK (AP)--Charley|is that he started boxing when} "Doug is going in there confi. : trained retired|he was young, like the old-tim-jdent he can win," said mana- Ladies' Softball League. . Seaeeaight teenies 'Rocky ers aid." He eats, drinks and|ger Alex Koskowitz. 'We know Ahoy nigcyha -- Peer oh This league is hoping to ac- te ed gar vd oe ie Marciano and other world title-| sleeps boxing. It's his life, He's|Clay has weak spots and Doug) Fore fo Bens blsd commodate girls who are too tog een . & holders, says Cassius Clay is alas cocky as they come andjis going to work on them." me Faricombe. eloid for the Bantam teams in e, ex ve for 1963 was i» BAY 1 box-|that's good insid don't also added one assist while Bill Dexia bat who installed. Elected were: Presi- Serene to (Se aidline Se Pee (hing, eit. toot Deiter Clay Ya" the came Tooyinons Gee emt Se oe ars nak iatorseted. tela nmr] tn srank Sanerves diem "He says he is the greatest,'"'| Jones. If he wants to go after|jight as Goldman. preggers gerne dae mer sport. It is anticipated that Mong gape A Bhs, said Goldman Monday. "Maybe|Sonny Liston after that, why) pBiny Daniels, the Brooklyn B08 nolthe city will be divided into four] Anne Jones 723-4175 c é F 4 fae cote main thing is tat\not? He's as big and strong 88/,a%427 who fought both Clay|, 4° Moye ick Hardingizones with King and Simcoe!" ai) ot this meeting it s awa § op re fa er he thinks so, No one has licked | Liston." and Cleveland Williams, sayS|iing Street as they defeated St [teets, 88 the boundaries. St] accidea that a lst of girls inter- Be Oh tener te tie creat | BOASTE EPS CINCH Williams is a better fighter. |Paul's, 3-1. Mike Rose got St.|besent Own isem Lm Oi peon|ested and of the proper age, bell 2am75Q-(4, 4-ply RECAP ele ee anes A Oe aeal Wik one hom to te bed el ce accepted into this league. |ini"S0ere pleave call either off] SUMMER TIRES & Trades By ' ro fights--14 by knockouw' ong rights to the head be- zi ie is sport please call Goldman declined to make aa bes a cinch to stop|fore he was stopped on cuts in "A" TROPHY FINALS Scugog 'Cleaners, who had SPECIAL 2--750-14, 4-Ply DOM- INION ROYAL GUARD TUBELESS Whitewalis and Re taken command in the sixth when Patterson brought the bout to a sudden end with a right. Patterson had previ- ously lost and then regained his title in bouts with the power-punching Swede. next meeting on March 2, at 2 p.m., Woodview Park Club- the three above numbers. any comparison of Marciano] Jones in Madison Square Gar-|the seventh round last May. WLTF A Pts.|their initial season last year,) PLEASE NOTE: This league and Clay. den tonight. Williams whipped Daniels in a|Christ Church ; 0 2/|will play against the teams in| wiv) have no affiliation or con- "They are two different types| "He'll go in four," said Cas- bruising battle Saturday night. Harmony 6 0 1 begin nyg nae ~ ea ong 88 of fighter," said Goldman.|sius, who originally . predicted "RB" TRO asis only. S$ is due to "Rocky was strong and wore|Jones would fall in six rounds. HAS SELL-OUT B ape INCOME T AX King Street 10 01 RETURNS gog Cleaners having been obli- his opponents down. Clay is a| Despite Clay's non-stop trum- Clay has kicked up such a T1 SHORT FORM har iis Cad tread Ae gated to submit ay} Panos Dg boxer with fast hands and|peting of his own greatness, he|storm that the Garden already : Jan. 15, to Toronto, if they wish- power. Rocky proved himself./hasn't broken the solid feeling has been sold out'to its capa-|St. Paul's 30 PAIR ed to participate in an organ- INSTALLED Clay still has to. of confidence in the Jones|city of 18,000. The gross gate vear which was the East To. FREE Snow Tire Remove' Pega ne ized league, as they did last "The will hit $100,000 and closed-cir- ting 7 the shont Clay cuit television to 40 outlets in camp. MINOR LEAGUE Basketball Playoffs On Three Separate Fronts At the Simcoe Hall Settle- ment House last Saturday morn- ing, the Y's Men's Club of Oshawa -- Simcoe Hall Minor League play-offs got under way, with the first round of a two- game, total-point semi-finals be- ing run off. The first game of the morn- ing saw Medical Pharmacy come out on top with a 13-point margin, as they trounced St John's Cadets 39 to 26. In this contest there was no question as to the outcome right from the start, as the shorthanded St. Johns crew were out-classed in every department, and but for the shooting» a J. Rajkovic wouldn't have been as close as they were when the final whistle blew. Scores by. the quarters were 10 to 6, 15 to 10, 27 to 14 and then the final 39 to 26. Top point getter for Medical Phar- macy was Cyr with 18, while for St. John's Cadets the marks- man was Rajkovic with 15. MEDICAL PHARMACY -- Blakholmer 6, Cyr 18, Martins 3, Komposch 6, Langley 4, Cor- by, Zimny 2- Total -- 39. Fouls 1-out-of-4. ST. JOHN'S CADETS -- Raj- koyic 15, Sheppard 5, Boivin 2, Palnazko 2, wards, Swindell 2. Total 26, Fouls 2-out-of-9. KINLOCH'S AWAY AHEAD In the second game of the day, the team that ended sched- ule play as the hottest, contin- ued their winning ways as they took a 21-point lead into the second game, ' This teams is Kinloch's Men's Wear. and they defeated the Provincial Tile team 37 to 16. This game started as a very close affair, with the Provincial Tile team holding a nine to eight lead at the end of the first quarter , by the half though the Kinloch's squad had taken over the lead by a five point margin and never looked back. The sec- ond half saw the Kinloch's Men's Wear team check the Provincial Tile team to a stand- still and also outscore them by a 20 to 5 count. High scorers for Kinlochs Men's Wear were Steffaniak and McConkey with 12 and 9 respectively, while for Provincial Tile it was Haas with eight and Bradica with six leading the vay. PROVINCIAL TILE -- Haas 8, Bradica 6, Bugelli, Morrison, Sugden, Mcliveen 2. Total 16. 38 cities will add about $250,000 to the promotional pot. Thanks to Cassius' non-stop talkathon, Jones will earn close to $70,000 on his 25 per cent. Clay will collect about $90,000 on his 30 per cent, Clay is the favorite at odds ronto Ladies' Softball League. USED TIRES included In Above Prices. BASKETBALL SCORES -- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National Basketball Association Syracuse 130 Chicago 106 Cincinnati 110 New York 96 San Fran. 116 Los Angeles 110 COMPLETED Have Your Suit Styled and Tailored by 7 KING ST. EAST From A Large Selection of Fine British Woollens SAM ROTISH $2.00 U.A.W. HALL Hours: 9-5 p.m., 7-10 p.m. Saturday 9-12 DOMINION e et Terms 1.99 up @ We Do Our Own Fi r TIRE STORES |e aoeee 48 BOND WEST DOMINION TIRE STORES LIMITED (Corner of Church 725-6511 ranging from 13-to-5 to 3-to-l. > Fouls 6-for-16, KINLOCH'S MEN'S WEAR-- Steffaniak 12, Mc- Conkey 9, Krasnaj 3, Jacula 5, Birkowicz, Naurot 8. Total 37. Fouls 5-out- of-12. WIN FOR BOLAHOOD'S Third and last game of the morning saw Bolahood's Sports- haven defeat the Oshawa Fire- fighters Assoc: 24 to 20. This game started in rather a slow gait and as it progressed, the tempo picked up with Bola. hoods holding a big edge in all departments. The first quarter ended with the score reading Bolahood's eight and the Firefighters five, at the half the Sportscrew had increased their lead to 17-10, and each quarter after saw their lead grow bigger until at the final whistle they held the fourteen point bulge. Top basket-sinker for Bola- hood's Sportshaven and_their|™ rebound artist was Glecoff with 17, and for the Firefighter As- soc, the high scorer was Sal- way with nine points. Second game in two game total point series -- Semi-finals. The games scheduled for this Saturday; March 16, are as fol- lows: 9.00 a.m. Kinloch's Men's Wear vs Provincial Tile; 10.00 a.m, Bolahood's Sportshaven vs Firefighters Assoc. and 11.00 a.m. Medical Pharmacy vs St- John's Cadets. Those persons wishing to take in these games may do so by going to Simcoe Hall, with the admission being free. Parents especially are invited to attend. Irish Go 'Blaah' To Flash-In-Pan Pseudonym Boxer QUEBEC (CP) -- The mys- tery of Owen (Rocky) Clark of Quebec City has been solved, but a sense of disappoiatment re- mains. Tt isn't easy for the 12,000 Irish of this French-speaking city to see a potential hero nipped in the bud. When the green St. Patrick's drafts are hoisted March 16 at Bill Noonan's Chien d'Or tav- ern, the best they can say about Clark is that he won all his fights as an Irish lad and lost the rest' as a French-Canadian. Even then, someone may point out that Clark was a French-Canadian in the first place. His name came up last Nov. 30 when The Associated Press reported that Owen (Rocky) Clark of Quebec City nad in his first professional fight knocked out experienced Johnny Bean of Philadelphia in the third round at Worcester, Mass. The news caused excitement in Irish sporting circles, which have subsisted on St. Patrick's High School football victories) wno picked the short-lived alias. for 10 years. Then there was curiosity. Who was this Clark? NO ONE KNEW HIM The habitues of Le Chien d'Or| Chaun has cursed the lad to vic- hadn't heard of him. At Jeffrey Hale's Hospital,| Clark. only Irish-speaking one in the city, elderly patients began re- viewing every fight. since the Irish potato famines sent theirjers of Toronto, who has had ancestors here. Clark didn't figure in any. Talk was dying down whenjand field circuit Clark struck again in Worces-|years, will compete in the Brit- ter, knocking out Ricky Pal-jish Amateur Athletic Associa- mieri in one round. Reports|tion ii."20r meet at London's said the young lightweight was|Wembley Arena this week. being touted as a future cham- pion, the most colorful ifghter/Toronto pharmacy student will to appear at Mechanics Hall since Timothy (Buddy) Hayes. This news stirred some frus-|yards Saturday. tration. How could Clark, whose punch was said to match a mid- nearly knocking him out again. dleweight's, have escaped un- noticed in his hometown? Then Louis Fusk, sports edi- tor of the Chronicle-Telegraph, dug deep and unearthed the news, "It was the toughest column Bess ever had to write," he said ater. ASSUMED NAME Owen (Rocky) Clark was none other than Rodrigue Beau-| pre, a well-known Quebec City) amateur who had changed his name as a last-m'nute substi- tute in the Bean fight. When he pole-axed Palmieri in the second fight, manager Louis Belanger talked Beaupre into forgetting his hopes of mak- ing Canada's 1964 Olympic team and becoming a professional un- der his real name. Rodrigue did, and promptly lost a rematch to Bean after Then he lost a decision to Dick French, New England junior welterweight champion. It was manager Belanger But, he says, Beaupre will pros- per under his own name. Unless, that is, some lepre- tory only as Owen (Rocky) TO RUN IN LONDON TORONTO (CP)--Bill Croth- tremendous success in the North Americen indoor track in recent The 22-year-old University of compete in the 600-yard event Friday night and the 1,000 Rarin' to really travel? Comet's ready for you Hold on to your bucket seats-now COMET has soothingly quiet, ultra-smooth ride. (That 114-inch wheelbase makes a difference! So does the lavishly applied sound insula- tion.) Plus service-saving features like the 36,000-mile major lubrication interval. Visit your Mercury dealer and learn more about the '63 Comet, including its 24,000-mile or <ecu, 24-month warranty. See what modestly-priced quality . looks like on wheels! P.S. If you don't have siz- zling taste, remember Comet has two 6-cylinder . engines. Both Sixes and V-8 thrive on regular gas. a Mercury V- with sizzling V-8 power --164 horses' worth. Now you'll really wonder what the big ones have that Comet hasn't! Want more thrills? 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