Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Nov 1963, p. 14

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

atelier nee ee 14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, November 28, 1963 sansa mera pees covnnecengecinness: space gapes se ae xs -- " 4 Le. 10.. ©... e. Lions Are Backing Tom Brown For Win | VANCOUVER (CP)--If Brit- ish Columbia Lions put the hex on 'Hamilton Tiger-Cats Satur- day, the chief wizard may be |Tom Brown, The 245 - pound inside line-|day that, backer will call B.C.'s defensive}son records and Tom Brown, signals in the Grey Cup, mak-jthe Hamilton linemen have an ing him far and away the most/advantage over the Lions, important man facing the Ti-| 'We've got boys in the line Cai attack. who are individually not as good "He has been the bulwark of/as they are," Champion said. 'I our defensive unit," says Lion'don't want to hurt our boss but coach Dave Skrien. 'Much of|that's the way it is." ven defence is designed around) Hamilton's offensive line of|tendencies,"" Champion says. ig ae a six men includes centre Chet "You'ye got to stop them Brown, 26, was a gymnast aSimikeza, guards Gene Gossagelacross the goths Penge the times, recovered 15 of them and|rage 213. allowed only 11 touchdown HAMILTON TOPS - passes. By nad -- oe Champion professed. Wednes-|ton's the Lions have the size iths i _|they need, says Champion. But aaeraeviae. Wace he rates Tiger - Cats as_ the strongest team in Canadian foot- ball and yows the Lions coach- ing staff "never doubted who jwe would meet in the Grey Cup if we made it." B.C, hae had to concentrate on all phaess of te Hamilton attack because "they have no © Sp FOOTBALL SIGNALS -- TO HELP 4. INCOMPLETE PASS. Hands criss-cross horizontally in front of body. 5. ILLEGAL INTERFER- ©NCE. Hands pushing from body forward from shoulder. 6. CLIPPING. Hand strikes back of knee. 7. SCORE. Both arms raised above head. 8. NO YARDS ON KICK. Arms folded. These are the most common- ty used signals by referees at Canadian football games. 1. OFFSIDE. Both hands on hips, then one arm pointing toward offending team. 2. ROUGH PLAY. Arm , Straight out pointing at of- « fending player. 3. HOLDING, One hand grasping wrist. GREY CUP FANS From City An well as a top football player at/ang Hardiman Cureton, tackles! mark of a really good offence." Minnesota and Skrien says his Bronko Nagurski and Angelo' If the season's expatience ed for a big man is amaz- Mosca and ends Hal Patterson means anything, the Lions will ee F " jand Dave Viti. Average weight/hold their linebackers and re- Assistant coach Jim Cham-|i. 939 pounds, eat (rem ca oat cues fie DOD Bey KORE 18 BEDE Gt CEee on quarterback Bernie' Faloney as possible, protected from Nor will they put two defend- blocking to "keep him where he me an Baller hints Chun: sash hPa one te cic, ends Dick Fouts and Mike pion. DANDY RECORD Martin, Average weight is also| Whether this will contain Fa- Over-all effectiveness is indi- 238. loney will be decided Saturday. cated by season records that) They handle part of the bur- Skrien, the last man to under- show opponents completed 48.3\den and the rest falls -- with rate Faloney, a veteran of six per cent of their passes, had 26|Brown the exception--on lighter|Grey Cup games, says he can ntercepted by Lions and scored| linebackers, including Don Vicic| pass as well as anyone in Can- - only 15. points a game. B.C./and corner -men Paul Seale and|ada when he's hot. McKenny's Goal THE TV FANS 9, INELIGIBLE RECEIVER. Both arms out straight from body. 10. BALL ILLEGALLY PUT. IN PLAY. Hands pushing for- ward with arms hanging down. 11. PILING ON. Hands mov- ing in front of body with chap- ping motion. 12. PENALTY DECLINED. Hands criss-cross in front of knees. them is a line of tack- s Emery Barnes and Mike Ca- Stacked against hasic four-man B.C. d Town They Come To Watch Wins For Rangers VANCOUVER (CP) -- Fifty fur-hatted football fans, as. ra- bid as any of the thousands con- verging on Vancouver for Sat- up behind the station. chartered a C-46 out of Yellow-|ular knife, N.W.T. One floor of a large down- town motel has been reserved for them, They'll move around Vancouver in a group aboard a bus that has been reserved for them. And they'll rub shoulders with people from all over the country who are just as Grey Cup-con-| scious as they are. The CPR, in what it calls "one of the heaviest Grey Cup rail movements in years," has laid on four special trains--two from Calgary and one each from Regina and Winnipeg--to move 7 J. thousands of persons into Van- Friday, couver. Friday morning one regular|42 FLIGHTS train and two extras will pull| Including regular flights, TCA . into the downtown station, dis-|in the next three days will fly ' gorging more than 1,000 per-jin 42 aircraft carrying 3,512 * sons within the hour, persons. runs Winnipeg and Edmonton. About 1,000 extra passengers are expected via CNR and some 500 of these will live in the rail- way's "Sleeper City"--a dozen parked sleepers behind the sta- tion. Trans-Canada Air Lines will have four extra flights in the air today, carrying a total of 341 persons from Edmonton, Montreal, Toronto, Calgary, Winnipeg and Regina. The east- ern specials will have Ottawa and Hamilton fans. A total of 545 persons will come aboard eight extra. flights ISPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell a2 SPORTS EDITOR a 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' ANNUAL COMPLAINT! We have on our. desk, at the moment, about 15 softball or baseball scorebooks belonging to various teams im the city. Some of these are quite new, with * only a few pages used. Others, while nearly filled up, contain . reports of playoff games, even championship tilts. They should be valuable to prospective managers, as a source of informa- . tion, for batting statistics, fielding records, etc. At any rate -- we have no use for them and so this is our final warn- ing -- if you want your scorebook, please pick it up, at once. We'll throw them into the waste-basket, within the next 10 days. x x x x THE GREY .CUP continues to become more-and-more of a sports spectacle. The fans are flocking into Vancouver via * air, rail and automobile, the visitors are all looking forward « to.the Grey Cup parade on Saturday morning and, of course, » taking into the big championship football game, later in the * day, Meanwhile, those who have to be content to stay at home and take their Grey Cup entertainment, via the TV screen, , afe more than happy to learn that this season they'll be able » to get "pictures" from two or three different stations. Out in Vancouver, where the Stadium crew is battling to get _ their Empire Stadium field in shape for this big game, they » are plagued by rain and more rain and the weatherman, an ' unsympathetic chap, has suggested that he'll likely have * more of the wet stuff for Saturday afternoon. x x x x SCHENLEY AWARD winners were announced late last night and as expected, Russ Jackson set some sort of a re- cord when he became the winner of two trophies, the 'most " valuable player" in Canadian football and also the "outstand- ing Canadian player" in our football circuit, B.C. Lions' ~. great linebacker Tom Brown was named the outstanding line- man in Canadian football. Schenley should sell a lot of their products down in Ottawa for the next few months and, of ™ course, the fact that Jackson will not be in the Grey Cup ~ game will create some caustic comment. And if Angela Mos- ».ca should outplay Brown in Saturday's classic, the Eastern "fans will have some more ammunition, The more one looks « at the over-all picture, the more wonders why one company "bothers to face such public relation hazards. ~ x x x x OSHAWA CURLING CLUB ladies held their annual one- "day bonspiel here yesterday and it proved an outstanding ~ success, with a full list of 32 entries, As a matter of fact, several of the visiting rinks enjoyed the hospitality, the ice, ~ facilities, etc., so well that they promptly made entry for "the Ladies' big two-day bonspiel, early in February. The final "results showed a well-balanced distribution of "the loot' "among out-of-town rinks, along with the "local" Oshawa Golf ~ Club entries and the host club rinks. General opinion ex- "pressed was that this was ene of the club's best one-day bon- »spiels on record and, of course, such success means that the ~ 1964 committee will have a flying start 'to success, . x x x x DANNY O'SHEA, of Oshawa Generals, in spite of his "team's sixth-place standing in the OHA Junior "A" schedule race, rates 14th in the league's point-scoring race and at the ~~ latest recording, goalie Dennis Gibson has the second-best = "goals-against" average in the league, which certainly is a good showing, considering the team's position. Next week, Generals have a little easier time of it, in actual games, but their op- ™ position is tough enough. They play Marlboros in Bowman- ville'on Tuesday night -- and just maybe the Generals could win This one, for a major upset. ' Sixteen sleepers, accommoda-; ppe tion for 400 persons, will be set/limited by statute to one flight abated a little; Don McKenney|similar thoughts, The CNR reports several ex- urday's Grey Cup classic, have|tra cars will be attached to reg- today. On Friday} there'll be special train: out of/out of Toronto will bring in 110)'Mary" Canadian Pacific Airlines, appear, | | | | LONDON (Reuters) sults of soccer matches played lin Britain Wednesday night: Under-23 International |England 4 West Germany 1 European Cup Winners' Cup Second Round, First Leg Tottenham vs. Man United ppd. business opportunity. We of financing, food and delivery, ete. This is the Deal you've been wait- ing for! Phone: ONTARIO FOOD FREEZER SERVICE 728-2963 Og Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. Second Round Second Leg \Sheffield. W 1 Cologne, West Germany 2 Cologne won on aggregate 5-3 Football Association Cup First-Round Replay Wrexham: 3 Altrincham 0- Football League Cup Fourth Round Halifax 1 Norwich 7 Leicester 3 Gillingham 1 Manchester City 3 Leeds 1 Rotherham 5 Millwall 2 Stoke 2 Bournemouth 1 Unofficial British Club Championship First Leg Rangers 1 Everton 3 There Ave cena Benefits For All BUSINESS EXECUTIVES AND SALESMEN For personal use or for @ ACADIAN Seema inact ace @ PONTIAC definite advantages wh e BUICK you lease a new . No insurance costs . . , No maintenance costs . . everything on one or two yeor lease item, . . for full details, MILLS AUTO LEASE PHONE 723-4634 LTD. 266 KING ST. WEST Other Models in Request . One rate covers -Phone or come ia By THE CANADIAN PRESS jfenceman Doug Harvey. And itjchuk for the second successful cross-country, will fly. a pas- is temporarily off the spot. McKenney, like Harvey, has| FELL IN CREASE : jsenger special in from Pentic-| McKenney's days as a New|been assigned to the bench this) Referee Vern Buffey called Chamber of Commerce charter/numbered earlier this year. Was Sree wd a pea forward trey had fallen on the-puck in was the nicknamejand New York indicated they'd. crease, breaking an often- Some 90 persons will arrive|the gallery at Madison Squarejonto for Dick Duff. jviolated but seldom - y acific| Garde rule, jfrom Edmonton on one Pacific Garden HERO WEDNESDAY A second PWA special is "the }too ie an Ferg and McKenney tries to do his|Middle period and Ranger de- one out of Yellowknife. one ze 5 best when he does get on the|fenceman Don Johns got his '. .|sons that prompted Boston Bru-|'™* ! : el Race ger ne i ins 'to trade him last year. |example. of the third, Norm Ullman tied Ss McKenney put the puck past things up for the Wings at 10:46 hadetlay 29-year-old centre would exit injTe?ty Sawchuk at 12:24 of the but McKenney broke it up less or Ades the same manner as ousted de-|final period to give New York a/than two minutes later. ment employee who doubles as) stst--'ésSOOWO#*# win moved the Blueshirts into! iy we a CBC Mackenzie network Hornets Whip la fourth-place tie with the Red|Urned to the Ranger nets after s : bs shoulder injury and was a |Hamilton resident and it's Ham- played two more games, re tae, . jilton Tiger-Cats who will be Buffalo Biso { er gyda ge pl ns goal of the season and made|three i jon Saturday. him, for the moment, a hero of oS : A full slate of games is sched- re ; : It extended N York's | : ; My wife doesn't know one beaten' string ty Wir genselitet its 10th straight home win, end of a football from the other) By THE CANADIAN PRESS While increasing Detroit's win.|20Sts Toronto, New York is at in 1)" be soled Pittsburgh Hornets tightened|less streak on the road to nine| poston and Montreal, with The group is as interested in|American Hockey League's| Larry Jeffrey put the Wings|!ineup and Henri Richard doubt- ; y head in the first period but|ful, visits Detroit. although some of Adderley's| Wednesday night with a 6-3 wi Se eer companions shuddered at the tory over Buffalo Bisons. later on the third penalty ehot ARREST DELEGATES . ata eague games of the season. He lified a hip-| "Even our' stores don't open "este high shot to the right of Saw- il 9°30." Springfield Indians 9-3 at Ro-|_" ising aw-jmany (Reuters) -- Two East until 9:30,"' they said. | Springs | German trade union officials : |Les Binkley recorded his second} f |Put quarter ragged ad poe shutout as the Barons whipped jcharges of endangering the Pittsburgh's win at Buffalo Flies To Detroit ganda against West Germany A summary of the detailed /left the Hornets: with 32. points during a trade union congress, MONTREAL (CP) Mont- ade preceding it also will be|Division standings. Rochester is|real Canadiens announced Wed-|North Rhine-Westphalia justice available to passengers in thelin second with 20 points, tiedjnesday that foward Gilles plied to the CN by The Cana- last with 13. fly to Detroit Thursday to re- their arrest, dian Press. Idle Providence Reds are atop join his teammates ee - other clubs--Hershey. and Bal-|bone fracture in a National| ATTENTION timore Clippers. All have 19|Hockey League game here with 16 and Springfield last with when he was struck by a way- SOCCER SCORES»: ee Hon yaway'! SALESMEN! svi seanen We have a number of openings for Re NEA a si shse whether Tremblay will play in| jlead at Buffalo and was never| Lpursday's game against De-| headed. Bob Dillabough clicked|*To!t Red Wings. Tremblay will Holmes, Lowell MacDonald and/!JUry area. Adam Keller completed the| It was not known here 'for Buffalo and Bob Turner,at Detroit. He injured his groin netted a single. in a game in Fort Wayne, Ind., three goals and Dick Gamble, and Bob Armstrong got two tory. Darryl Sly and Wally Boyer added the others, Dennis field and Michel Labadie once. The Barons dominated the Cleveland. Cec Hoekstra, Joe Szura and Ray Kinasewich were goalie Andre Gill of Hershey had a busy night as the Bar- in the opening period, two of \them going for goals. He had The pressure seems to havejappeared the Ranger brass had'free shot this season. jton, B.C., Friday. A Junior York Ranger appeared to bejyear. He wasn't given a line, the penalty shot because Jef- persons. given him by the fickle fans in|be willing to trade him to Tor-| \g enforced |Western airlines special. It seemed he didn't mind trade cdldn't qeteliniies The team played a scoreless "Miners, government employ-|'uch for scoring goals, the Tea/; "a .16 wednesday aight, forlfirst goal of the year at 5°28 flight," says organizer Jack The fans apparently hoped the is a govern-|__ ------|3-2 victory over Detroit. The) Goalie Jacques Plante jsportscaster.. He is-a former Wings although New York has|ssing aoa }meeting British Columbia Lions eh a cok enpees M, clsing jun 'ME TOO,' SAYS WIFE To Prove Point Be fans; uled for tonight, Chicago, seek- but she said: 'If you're going, so their grip on first place in the|games--eight losses and a tie,|@illes Tremblay returning to the the parade as it is in the game,,Western Division standings |g IC-/Rod Gilbert tied it up minutes ae 9 a.m. start. In the gai Boa Aloe DUSSELDORF, West Ger- | CN Telecommunications will chester and at Cleveland goalie| . : jhave been arrested here on Gilles Tremblay in the country. Hershey Bears 3-0. state by trying to spread propa- events of the game and the par- and a big lead in the Western- Announcing this Wednesday, the form of train news bulletins sup-|with Cleveland, and Buffalo is\Tremblay, injured Nov. 7, will appealed to a local court against the Eastern standings with two| Tremblay suffered a. cheek-| OLD COUNTRY points. Quebec Aces are next| against Chicago Black Hawks) FOOD PLAN Coach Toe Blake will decide|} sxperienced Food| Plan' Soleamen Pittsburgh jumped to a 3-0 for two. Art Stratton, Chuck Wea? @ protective mask over the scoring. Merv Kuryluk got two) '"hether Henri Richard will play) Bronco Horvath banged. in Tuesday. each in Rochester's home vic- |Olson scored twice for Spring- game from start to finish at the goal getters. Alternate ons peppered him with 20 shots 134 stops all told. -- forced opponents to fumble 20;Norm Fieldgate, The three ave- | Baldwin Earns | Top Money Awards. Financial Alibi uornray..' yt «i Doesnt Exist Now But Record Sure the leading money winner on Baldwin, who handles triple VANCOUVER (CP) -- This| It will be a sell-out here. Sat- harness racing's grand circuit) \crown winner Speedy Scot, the|year's Grey Cup will not attract|urday, but since 1959 the league of his nearest rival, Billy attend will make it the richest/prices for behind-the-post seats Lloydminster, Sask., but now|the Canadian Rugby Union and) For the statistically mined, There will be 36,465 seats forjin Vancouver, with the gross Weatherman Just | ® |Columbia Lions for a BrOsS| 39 651 ($302,189); 1960, | 38,768 second consecutive day of sun-/Rough Riders tussled Edmon-| 1957 27,337 ($215,302.50); 1956, i ; j Xup/In 1960 the take was $323,583 might last until the Grey Cup! g ' The year 1955 the first year on such thoughts, The largest crowd ever to sit|/!ast year of the $7.50-top ticket. a »h|ing-room ricets, jriods until game time and said when 39,259 turned up to watch|!"8 : loaerp: privilege, going for $7.50, $6 and $5. game between Hamilton|ieast; has been cut, the ticket |the best seats $12 box seats, the this year with earnings of $299,-| 1899. | fastest three-year-old trotter in/the largest crowd in the history|has wiped out certain track history, finished $23,024 ahead |of the classic--but those who do|seats and declines to charge top Haughton, : a lin history. jand other spots of limited yan- Baldwin, 47, is a native of] Harry McBrien, secretary of! tage. lives in Pompana Beach, Fla./Canadian Football League, gave|here is the attendance all the out the figures today. |way back to the first Grey Cup the veg' Saturday between gate receipts in brackets: i Hamilton Tiger-Cats and British) 1962, 39.655 ($902 489); 1961 * » 92, 489); Born Pessimist? © ticket sale of $341,576.50, | ($323,583.50); 1959 33,133 ($302,- VANCOUVER (CP) -- The Not since 1960, when Ottawa|gog 59)- 1958 36,567 ($266,939.74); shine in Vancouver raised hopes|ton Eskimos--also in Vancouver' 97 3 ; |\Wednesday that fine weather|--has the payoff been that high. a an ee ame Saturday, But the wea-|and there were 38,768 persons in) Itherman pols 'aan a damper the stands. the game moved West, was the : ee lin on a Grey Cup game was--|Prics that year ranged $7.50, In the first official Grey CuP/,cain in Vancouver--in 1955|$6 and $5, with a few $2 stand- forecast he predicted cloudy pe- tere ls @ g00d "ChINDS Of TMi Edmonton whomp Montreal Al-| The next year the price went sometime during ihe day of the ouettes and paid $228,051 for the to a $10 top, with other seats At Emivir ae hore, rhe paradox is that while the} The price held firm until 1961, Phong Empire Stadium, where attendance, in Vancouver at|when the league made some of Tiger-Cats and British Colum-| i.) pac jet idi |bia Lions will be played, crews |Price has been rising. ee a ee Fog Cancels "SPORTS BRIEFS Manchester And Hotspur Clash | will work until game time to dry jout the field, still a mire after |two weeks of nearly continuous rain, Czechs Coming Here For Tour PASS ON HARVEY QUEBEC (CP)--Robert Mar- |tineau, general manager of Que- |bec Aces, said Wednesday Doug | : Harvey would be more of 'a sONDON (Reuters) -- A Ld |scheduled clash between Eng.| Problem than ee acquisition" it e est lish soccer giants Tottenham|for thé American Hockey | |Hotspur and Manchester United| League club. He did not elabor- MELVILLE, . Sask. (CP) --\in the European Cup Winners'|ate but said in an interview the Pp p Coach Jiri Anton will have the|Cup was postponed Wednesday|Aces aren't interested in pick- jcream of 97,000 amateur hockey|night because of fog. ing up Harvey, released by New Veoaaad a ta i ion A crowd fo about 60,000 at York Rangers Tuesday. is Czechoslovakian national) mission| hockey team makes an L-gamel tickets would be aia & ie aCe TO Noee heey tour of Canada Dec.| other night next week. HOUSTON (AP) -- A sugges- |17-Jan, sti sanding | tion that the new $24,000,000 Dates for the tour, a warm-up cheese Wie aks defending} stadium here be named in ho- for the 1964 Olympics in Feb-\1 1 tie by Swedish champion|°r of former President John ruary . aa ea Austria, Norrkoeping. |Kennedy was turned down Wed- were releas ednesday by ' jnesday and the structure was Gordon Juckes, registrar oft he|,,jnowher Italian entry, Inert sied the Harris County Canadian Amateur Hockey As- |W ean' aay tient ondco:-*"|Domed: Stadium, Most commis- sociation. datos Ae |sioners said they felt the ap- Anton ise xpectedt o use two| Two teams clinched berths in y y .|/proved name has been accepted . the quarter-final round. Eindo ; goaltenders, six defencemen and 4 '+, (for several years by the public. four forward lines for the Ca-|ven of Holland tied 0-0 with) - |nadian tour, including national|SPartak Plovidiv of Bulgaria to team voters Vasil, Bob. roan 1 and era nik, 32, Mirosl ach, 28, and| 4 % Josef eoeve ugh He ae, inl esse d'Esche of Luxembourg 6-2/even on aggregate 2-2 and they duce the squad to 17 for the|t0 take their series 7-4. must play off to decide who Olympic tournament. Galatasaray of Turkey beat) will- advance. | Tour dates for Ontario cen- jtres are Jan. 1 against a local) team in Ottawa, Jan, 3 against} |the Canadian Olympic team in| |Sudbury and Jan. 5 aaginst the! Swedish national team in Tor- BASKETBALL SCORES By THE CANADIAN PRESS National Association | Cincinnati 122 Baltimore 119 St. Louis 113 Detroit 105 San Francisco 118 New York 89 Boston 114 Los Angeles 78 Zurich of Switzerland 2-0 in Is- tanbul. This put the two teams ministry said the two officials! WITH THE PURCHASE OF \ \~\ _ "SILENT SAFETY" WINTER CLEATS. WHY SHOULD YOU HAVE EXTRA WHEELS? The answer is simple...and yet, important, Every year, thousands of motorists have their regular tires removed and have special winter tires mounted. What they don't realize is this: each time snow tires are installed, you risk injury to the vital air-seal that lies between the rim and the tire. By mounting your snow tires on their own special wheels, you will be minimizing tire injury twice a year. You'll enjoy greater convenience, too. Because it's certainly easier and faster to switch wheels, complete with tires, twice a year, than to change tires, /, . Our Used Car Manager Selects These as Outstanding RED TAG "GOODWILL" VALUES 1959 BUICK 1962 PONTIAC 1963 BUICK 2-DOOR LAURENTIAN ELECTRA "225" Custom rado, white ed ell nt tae Fully power equipped, Immacu- steering, power brakes; a good wheel discs, low clean low mileage car, finished late throughout. New. cor "guare new tires. One owner executive driven, Bmileage, 5 in. metallic satin silver SAVE HUNDREDS $1195 $2295 OF DOLLARS MANY, MANY MORE GOODWILL USED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM The CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. 260 KING ST. WEST 'OSHAWA PHONE 723-4634 Dynoflow, wall tires, antee; Wg Sasa NYLON $13.96 Ti RES 670 X 15 - TUBE TYPE BLACKWALL - EXCHANGE THE GENERAL TIRE "MUD & SNOW" cee' GENERAL TIRE TIRE OF OSHAWA A DIVISION OF GENERAL TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY OF CANADA LTD. 534 RITSON RD. S. PHONE 728-6221 OPEN 8:00 A.M. - 6 P.M, MONDAY TO SATURDAY

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy