Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Nov 1963, p. 15

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stati tenn nema a ae, HAPPY CHEERLEADER Elation at being chosen Miss Cheerleader 1963 at Wednes- day's Toronto Schools Associa- tion football final gives Susan 'Basketball Activities Start At Simcoe Hall | Basketball for the 1963-64 sea- son will commence on Saturday, Nov. 9 at the Simcoe Hall, Sim- coe street, when the Westmount/ute of play in each quarter will|the 1963-64 season are as fol- Biddy|be stop time, all other time will! lows: Kiwanis-s pons ored League for boys 12 years and} under will get underway starting at 8:45 in the morning. The Minor League for boys 16 years and under will start also on Nov. 9 with the first game} scheduled at 10:15 p.m. The Simcoe Halil Simcoe Street Biddy League will consist |jater this week from the West-|/Gatry Morrison, Rob of six teams again this yea mount Kiwanis and the team names are as fol- lows: _ Olives, Courts, Etnas,| Avenues, Bantings and Jack-|they should be dressed, sons. All teams have received| names representative of streets) in the area surrounding Simcoe) Hall Simcoe Street. Exhibition games will feature the league for the next two weeks with games scheduled for Satirday, Nov. 9: 8.45 a.m, -- Olives vs. Courts; 9.15 a.m, --) Etmas vs. Avenues; 9.45 a.m. -- Bantings vs. Jacksons. Teams for this season: OLIVES: Bill Melnychuk, David Manser, Allan Boivin,| Fred Tot, David Wilson, George Grabowski, Michael Buta. COURTS: Bill Swindells, Ray Bartolziej, Kenny Embury, Jack Pearce, Bob Morris, John Romanchuk, Nick Melnychuk. ETNAS: Bill Cobel, Steve Ball, Kevin Sawyer, Gordon Kent, Randy Embury, Charles Co- burn, Lyle Crystal. AVENUES: Randy Jackson, Jim Jordan, Serge Supont, Dale Shangraw, Mario Cononico, Mel Alchin, Douglas Crystal. BANTINGS: Tom Eldridge, Maurice St. Pierre, Ron Parfitt, Lyle Henderson, Billy Lee, Rich- Bartha an extra fillip. Susan was captain of Harbord Col- legiate Institute's winning team of cheerleaders shown a one-minute rest at the end of|Debona; Parts and Service, J. quarter time and a two-minute rest at half time, The last min- be running. Coaches selected for the Biddy League are as follows: Olives, John Rajkovic; Courts, Bob Hraynyk; Etnas, Mike Karas; Avenues, John Davidson and Len Birvkowicz. Coaches will 'be appointed All players are reminded that and ready to play at least ten min- utes prior to game time. MINOR BASKETBALL The Simcoe Hall Simcoe Street Minor Basketball league, spon- sored by the Oshawa Y's Men's Club will start also on Saturday, pate in this league with games scheduled from 10.15 a.m. to 12.15 each Saturday. " Minor league games will con- sist of four, seven-minute quar- ters with a one-minute rest be- jtween quarters and a two-min- ute rest at half time. Stop time will prevail for the last two min- utes of each quarter. Games scheduled for Satur- day, Nov. 9, will be on an ex- hibition' basis and are as fol- lows: 10.15 a.m., Bolahood's Sportshaven vs. CKLB; 10.55 a.m., Firefighters vs. Police As- sociation; 11.35 a.m., Kinloch's vs. Parts and Service. Coaches for the teams in the Minor Basketball League are as follows : Bolahood's haven, Gil Graham; CKLB, ard MclIlveen, Walter Karas. JACKSONS: Mike Zimny, Dick Howson, Ken . Jordan, Hatch, Emery Cascarella, Tim Craggs. All games in the Biddy League, both exhibition and league games will consist of four; five-minute quarters, with Turn To Scoring By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two Buffalo Bison penalty killers provided the scoring punch against Rochester Amer- icans Wednesday night as Buf- falo goalie Roy Edwards reg- istered his second consecutive American Hockey League shut- 0.t, 5-0 Edwards' goaltending was air- tight, but it was a pair of first period goals by penalty killers Billy Dea and Jerry Melnyk that broke the back of the Ameri- cans' attack Dea scored an unassisted goal and then set up Melnyk's tally as Bisons short-circuited Ro- chester's power play. The victory moved Buffalo out of the Western Division cel- lar and into third place, one point @head of idle Cleveland Barons. Elsewhere Hershey Bears + cotected a 1-0 lead for two pe- riods before Pittsburgh Hornets' Floyd Smith scored a pair of thard period goals to give Hor- nets a 2-1 victory. Art Stratton, who was farmed to Pittsburgh along with Smith last week by the Detroit Red Wings of the National League assisted on both goals as Hor- nets extended their Western Di- vision lead to four points over Rochester. GERMANS WIN COLOGNE, West Germany (AP) -- FC Cologne edged Eng- jland's Sheffield Wednesday 3-2 Wednesday night in their first- leg soccer game of the Inter- Cities Fair Cup. Penalty Killers | |Dave. Piatti; jman Lowes and Club to mound out the coaching roster. | Nov. 9.. Six teams will partici-| Sports- Firefighters, Nor- Arnold|tered for basketball and would Frank|Cummer; Police Association, | !Wayne Bruce; Kinloch's, Chuck 'HE'S MODEST, TOO === Vote Howard MVP In American Loop, 'Kaline Runner-Up BOSTON (AP)--Elston How-|Radatz, the leader in earned run|League receivers with a .994 'lard, the take - cnarge catcher| average, | fielding average, was fifth in the '|who spurred the hobbled New, Montreal - born Pefe Ward,|league with 28 homers and '|York Yankees to a fourth con-|slugging Chicago White Sox/eighth in runs batted in with 85, _\secutive America League|rookie third baseman, placed| 'When something like this championship, today was named ninth in the voting with 52 points|happens, it makes baseball the league's most valuable|three behind pitcher Garry Pe-|worthwhile," said Howard from player. iters, another White Sox rookie,|his Teaneck, NJ. home into Howard received 248 votes tol Howard, first Negro to earn| which he has just moved. 'This 148 for runner-up Al Kaline of|4 Pot in the Yankees' lineup,|is the greatest. You know, I was Calgary Stars Best On Paper REGINA (CP) -- Calgary Stampeders dominated the ma- jor individual and -team statis- tics during the 1963 season, Bill Hawrylak of Regina, chief sta- tistician, announced Wednesday night. Quarterback Eagle Day, half back Lovell Coleman flanker Bobby Taylor, 'all of Calgary, won individual honors. Day was the top passer with a record 228 completions in 374 attempts for a 60.9 per cent completion average and 3,126 yards, Coleman netted 1,343 yards rushing to win by a comfortable margin over Willie Fleming of B.C. Lions, who finished second with 1,234. sean the Detroit Tigers. Howard had/is @!so the first Negro to be|offered 35 or 40 college scholar- 15 first-place votes and was| named MVP in the American| ships when I was in high school, _|named on all 20 ballots cast by |League. The Nationa: League I'm not sorry about choosing! '\a committee of the Baseball|Winner has been a Negro 11)baseball, now especially." | Writers' Association of America.|Years in the last 15.. | Peo oe ns member) Third was Yankee pitching|LED LEAGUE of the Yankees in the last 10) ace Whitey Ford with 125 points,| With his MVP predecessors pogkge be named MVP and the| including three firsts, |Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris}. th be nn honored: Yet he'e He was followed by Harmon sidelined by injuries for sizable]; mast he lig oes Detroit) Killebrew, the Minnesota Twins portions of the season, Howard dansed in 1994 Sabares wae _|slugger, with 85, and Boston|led the league champions with po.. yogi Sitteasd ths sea Red Sox outfielder Carl Yastr-'a .287 batting average. whose catching job he 100K way zemski, the batting champion,| The six - foot two - inch 205- pipe three: tines away and Red Sox relief pitcher Dick'pounder paced American ee ee |Hall Splendid In Hawk Nets | By THE CANADIAN PRESS cerned about high-scoring Hull Sure enough, Bobby Hull and/@nd Mikita as he is about Hall,|League Wednesday night. lStan Mikita deserve a large| Blake gives a great deal of Ben Graco scored twice in the share o° credit for Chicago Credit to Hall and his strong de-\second .pei'od for St. Louis, Black Hawks surge to the top fensive wall of Pierre Pilote, which took its third league vic- of the National Hockey League|Elfer Vasko, Al MacNeil, |pory. Barry Cullen also scored standings, |Howie Young and Wayne tang Moot a daca | , > |man, In two previous meetings,| -time scorers for the los- Budo ovoo Ginn Hal, 82" nade ot 33 ole ore deanno" Gibran net. His superb goaltending is awks and then settled for the' the she gee . : a good part of the reason why|!! tie 2 in Setund oie. ga sei n\ "We played well enough oe sbreascetiane Sin oh jthe Hawks 'are separated from ; to : oan [pt rest of the league by six) win both of those games,' Blake} A of gf A : Breakaway Tally | Wins For St. Lou | MINEAPOLIS (AP) Phil beneath her. They are from left to right: Annette Boyko, Helen Wojcik, Helen Poliwka and Canol Howard, points. says, "At Chicago we allowed) LZ passes for 1,057 yards. His re- ception total br ke a mark of 68 set a decade ago by Bud Grant and equalled in 1959 by end Ernie Pitts, both of Winmni- peg. Quarterback Joe Kapp of B.C. led the WFC in touchdown passes with 20. Clay-Liston Fight Scored SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--The |proposed Cassius Clay - Sonny} Esposito scored a break-away |/iSton heavyweight title fight| |goal at 14:54 of the third pe-/was called a dangerous" mis-| riod to give St. Louis a 5-4 vic-|match Wednesday by a Califor-, tory over Minneapolis in the|nia boxing official, who said it! Central. Professional Hoc ke y\could result in grave injury to) the young challenger. Sol Silverman, chairman of the California "committee on safeguards for professional box- ing, criticized the fight, for which contracts were signed Tuesday. He said not one former heavy- weight champion among the 11 now living regarded Clay as be- ing ready for Liston. Taylor caught a mnecord 74) Golfers At Big DETROIT (AP) Golfers fram 60 countries will shoot at a $200,000 jackpot, richest prize ever offered in a golf touna- ment, in the first World Open and| championship at nearby Oakland Hills County Club next August. Details of the tournament, which has a $35,000 first prize, were disclosed Wednesday night by tournament director Richard Taylor. He said the first round | will begin Aug. 27. The event will be held in the U.S, again in 1967, will shift to Britain in 1066 and to Canada in 1967, Taylor returned last week from a world tour in which he worked out details of nine sec- tional tournaments in which the world's top golfers, professional and amateur, will compete. Czechoslovakia is expected to be the only Communist country represented, - QUALIFY AT HOME Each foreign player will have Ito qualify in his own country, | Taylor said. For example, Gary Player, who has competed in many pro tournaments in the United States for the last few) | jyears, will have to qualify in jis home country, South Africa. | The field will include 105 U.S. closed. Point Money golfers. About 50 to 55 of them, , including the top pros, will be _ picked by next July based on~ their showing in Professional -- Golfers Association tourna: af qualify for the « others will be picked on showing in some of next year's PGA events, 4 There will be 35 foreign tries, plus 10 other winners certain lf tournaments bring the field to about 145, Golfers around the world have" to signify their intention of play+ . ing 45 days before tournament -- time and must post a $15 regis-~ tration fee, Foreign folfers will have to" register at the suburban Detroit golf course by Oct. 20: . en--- of es to. J oi] SHAW WILL SIGN REGINA (CP)--Head coach Bob Shaw of Saskatchewan" Roughriders has agreed to sign« a new two-year contract with= the Western Football Confer-% ence club, president Bob. Kra-« mer said Tuesday night. Terms * of the contract were not dis t*sa.bet For personal use or for @ Company use there are ® definite advantages when you lease a new... @ | No insurance costs . . | for full details. i) PHONE 723-4634 There Are Special Benefits For All BUSINESS EXECUTIVES. AND SALESMEN . No maintenance costs . .., One rate covers everything on one of two year lease items . . | MILLS AUTO LEASE LTD, DF TCALSEHRAA SES ACADIAN : Other PONTIAC -- BUICK Request Phone or come ia 266 KING ST, WEST bm: Mm Wa Hans Zam Up While 'his tesincidles have three soft goals, In the second) } jscored 37 times in 11 games, eet Se oe ys pes y |Hall has 4,,ahead by four goals ie firs all has only allowed 20 bucks | veriod but we. couldn't beat \McReelis and C.. Hewitt, to get behind him. His goals) enn Hall, i . against average of 1.8 is tremen-| | Teams and team captains anne ait and all the more amazing! 'I just-hope that Hall doesn't] whefr you consider the Hawks/keep playing that well all sea-| |James Clement, Bill Mulville. Progress B Thursday's Game Peterborough at Hamilton Central Professional WLT F that unmis A Pt 2118 29 18 49 9)" 49 8 37 3} quality. Stitch by stitch wan As ow WN ow d | BOLAHOOD'S: John Rajkovic|4T® senerally being outshot by 50% ig Capt., Nick Corneal, Bill Robin-|their opponents. The second-place Canadiens, « lson, Mike Wall, John. Davidson,| It's too early in the season to|attempting to close the six-point) \ lJack St. Pierre, Paul Hender-|class any game as crucial but|gaP between them and the) } son, Laird Black, Gary Manser.|in two important games so far,| Hawks, will meet Chicago likely) @ Bob Shepherd, Bill Langley,|the difference. Two weeks ago Geoffrion. He stil] is suffering a y Andy .Cherkas, Mike Green,|in Montreal his dazzling saves|bad bruise on his left hand. A Cooper, |held the Canadiens to a 1-1 draw, In the other games, the third-| @ jand last Saturday, in Toronto,|place Leafs will try to stay, } FIREFIGHTERS: Joe Kras-\he stopped th Leafs with a 2-0 within reach of the leaders) Locke, Gord Hall, Ron McInroy,| The Hawks visit Montreal to-/And Gordie Howe again will be . Sergio Barba, Tom Chapman,|night in one of three NHL looking for goal number 545 \Barry Mathews Joe Zimny. games scheduled and Canadiens|when the Red Wings host New | POLICE ASSOCIATION: Pat|coach Toe Blake is not as con-'York Rangers. \Cyr, Capt., Ralph Branton, Bill| |Rajkovic, Don-LePage, Howard} |Stone, Peter Bailey, Ricky HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS | Lewis, Jim Baskerville. KINLOCH'S: Gus i, Eastern Division Walter Hubar, Claude Roche-| WLT F APt} fort, Ken McWilliams, Don Sug-| Hershey 5 61 40 43 11) jden, Richard Buta, Mark Hood. | Providence 4 5 3 42 42 1llomaha 900 44 PARTS AND SERVICE: Jeff) Springfield 42 10|St. Paul 8 30 44 |\Mcllveen, Capt., Leonard Biriv-| Quebec 42 9\St. Louis 3.8 2 35 |Dewsbury, David Lee, Victor) Western \Indianapolis 17 1 19 Rudak, Lawrence Wry, Steve| Pittsburgh 20 16) Wednesilay's Result |Shewchuk. |Rochester 3412\<+, Louis 5 Minneapolis 4 Minor League players are. to| Buffalo 38 11)" " ete Red ; Friday's Game ten minutes prior to game time Wednesday's Results |. Players should be sure that|Rochester 0 Buffalo 5 Western League their name is checked off on the|Hershey. 1 Pittsburgh 2 Vancouver 1 San Francisco 3 |} game attendance register. Friday's Games | International League Any players 'from the 1962-63|Buffalo at Baltimore Muskegon 5 For Wayne 6 Eastern League sion of their sweaters are asked|Quebec at Providence \to return them as soon a po-|Pittsburgh at Rochester |Long Island 6 Knoxville 5 ible to the gymnasium at the Ontario Junior A | Northern Ont. Junior |Simeoe Hall Simcoe Street. F A Pt|Sault, Ont. 11 Sault, Mich, Any boys who have not regis- 64 3315 Ottawa-St. Lawrence Sr | | CKLB: Gord Perkins, Capt., both away from home, Hall was without the services of Bernie : ! Y, naj, Capt., Phil Mcllveen, Eddie shutout against the Bruins at Boston. Milosh,.. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Capt., Ray Jacula, Dave House, | | b 39 10| Mineapolis 471 4 |kowicz, Frank Cononico, Peter|Baltimore i ° ; at 'least|Cleveland 26 10| be ready for playing at least) Clevelan Louis at'. Paul season who still are in posses-|Hershey at Cleveland Greensbord 5 New Haven 3 32 28 13|\Cornwall 5 Kingston 10 | A\~ T ronto Peterborough Montreal St. Cath'ines ~\Niagara Falls Oshawa 46 28 11 Ontario Junior B 47 4010'Chatham 11 Essex 0 29 3210 Nova Scotia Senior 37 40 7; Windsor 3 Moncton 7 Kitchener 17 48 4 Saskatchewan Junior like to play are invited to at- tend on Saturday mornings AZ 1 1 1 0 i) 3 2 SHereuuuarns OPMwnanwnvnt Hand Crafted b Y Rand CLoTues A Gold Needle suit possesses takable air of distinguished +s these magnificent suits are "hand built" by tailoring craftsmen. "The House of Style for Men and Boys" 74 SIMCOE NORTH PHONE 723-3611 OPEN FRIDAY EVENING UNTIL 9 P.M. MEN'S WEAR LTD. Hamilton 2 32 55 2/Flin Flon 2 Estevan 4 | Henley Asserts Jackson HAMILTON (CP)--Hamil- | ton Tiger-Cat Halfback Gar- | ney Henley was in disagree- ment with his most ardent ad- | mirers here Wednesday over | their choice as the outstanding player in Canadian football. They chose Garney Henley. Henley chose Ottawa quarter- back Russ Jackson. At a Tiger-Cat Quarterback Club luncheon, Henley was presented with a plaque in- scribed: To Canada's most outstanding football player. The plaque was presented by a group representing Ham- ilton football writers and broadcasters, presumably in the form of a mild protest of the vote which named Jack- son as the east's outstanding player and Canadian, Henley, who hasn't played since he received rib and kid- Wednesday's Result Central Alberta se conia Falls 2 Kitchener 0 (Calgary 1 Edmonton 10 Y ONS Ww WH w/ Ty Vz Better ney injuries in a game Oct. 20, was named the Jeff Russel | Memorial Trophy winner 10 days ago. The award goes to the Eastern Football Confer- | ence's player who best com- ; bines outstanding ability with sportsmanship. Jackson won the nomination as top player and top Cana- dian, "I think he's the most out- standing player in Canada," said Henley, | Tiger-Cat coach Ralph Sa- | zio said he thought the fact that Henley missed the last two games because of injuries had a bearing on the voting. "If we had lost the two games he missed, people would have perked up their ears," said Sazio. "As it was, winning without him didn't help Henley's chances." | REGENT 723-3021 OR 728-6673 | "What's the flavour secret of Gold Crest Whisky?" "Tt's in Walker's secret distilling process" HIRAM WALKER'S IGOLD CREST} Sjol Canadian Rs phe ly sl th | Asecret distilling process gives Gold Crest a flavour you'll really enjoy. It combines the qualities you like best, in perfect balance. Gentle, light, golden-mellow to be sure--but with the subtle difference of'a great flavour secret. And always of the same superb quality. Try Gold Crest next time. You'll see why it's attracting so much attention, 6

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