Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jan 1964, p. 18

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j FOAL BY CARRY BACK * Back To Back, the first foal by Cary Back, who eamed more than a million dollars, is steadied by owner John S, Bolen, of Cincinnati, Ohio. She was dropped Sunday by Stefanne, left, who also drop- ped the first foal of Needles. --(AP Wirephoto) | OWNERS ISSUE THREAT 'Apartments May Rise On Strike-Bound Santa Anita » ARCADIA, Calif. (AP)--The strikebound Santa of , Park said Tuesday that of the race track are considering converting their property to other uses. , "We're it right ow," Robert P. Strub told re- it) ry 4 z i i if i af ng TEE y : 5 Z suspensions F 2 tario did to Whitby Zz coach L |MAKING PLANS "We have been' making pr-- liminary plans for some time," Stewart said, '"'and the studies will be finalized when our board | Santa Anita's general mana- iger, Fred H, Ryan, said the dispute with the union is not over wages but other financial issues. He said these include the union's request '"'that we pay health and welfare benefits to employees after retirement" and other aspects of the health and welfare plan. Ryan said he had no idea when the two sides might get together again. ' Santa Anita is 'a member of the Federation of California Racing Associations, The con- Kenora Team Suspended By Loop Directors | KENORA, Ont. (CP) --The {Ontario - Minnesota Hockey |League Monday announced the of Kenora Thisties| suspension for an indefinite period. Thistles have failed to ice a \team for their first four games| By THE CANADIAN PRESS | in the four-team international league. ONTO (CP) -- Three-| League President Cai Marvin) have beenjannounced the suspension foi- against two coaches and/lowing an executive m fines totalling $200 issued out/Kenora. Hockey Associa-| His statement said the sus-) curb rough play.|pension is effective "pending al ch Frank Bon-jruling to be ay es by) Bob) the SAnsder Oy A ateur| were suspended without|/Hockey Association." a fine @ Amico handed | meeting | misconduct penalties and) Thisties, a historic name in following a discuss this week, of using its property for other purposes, eeting in) | The Thunder Bay group, to| Players of both|which the Ontario - Minnesota in a Junior B game at/League belongs, is expected to the suspension at a tract. the union was negotiating |with Santa Anita would have set the pattern for those at cther tracks in the state. MONTREAL (CP) -- Howie Young, who has earned a repu- tation as a problem ciiild in the National Hockey League, was suspended indefinitely Tuesday. NHL president Clarence Ca eli said the suspension 8 until he has made a thor- ough investigation of the con- duct--in the penalty box--of the Young was suspended for three games last season for throwing a stick at referee Frank Udvari. He was also sus- pended by Detroit for failing to show up at a players' meeting, ed Wings shuffled him off last summer, trading him to Chicago for goalie Roger Cro- Chicago Black Hawks def man during a game in Toronto last Saturday. Campbell did not - indiacte when he expects to complete the investigation. The president's statement gave no details of Young's al- leged actions, but in Toronto Monday Stafford Smythe, pres- ident of Maple Leaf Gardens, said he had filed an official pro- test with the league and had also protested to referée-in-chief Carl Voss, Smythe said Young used in- temperate language in the pres- ence of women and children and spat. RECEIVED MINOR Just prior to whatever hap- pened, Young had been tagged by referee Vern Bufefy with a minor penalty for holding and a major penalty for elbowing. The controversial, 26-year-old defenceman, who formerly played for Detroit Red Wings, is no stranger to disciplinary action. record for penalty minutes, with 1978 minutes served. This sea- son so far he has accumulated 97 minutes and ranks third be- hind Reg Fleming of the Hawks, 108 minutes, and Vic Hadfiela of New York Rangers, 100 min- utes. Coaches Report Progress On | |WAGES NOT MAIN ISSUE | 1964 Schedule Ryan said that jwages were not a main issue of directors meets tomorrow, |they are "part of the economic) M#nesers picture." He said race track janitors have been making $165) jweekly while those in other in-! jdustries make $90.35; race track| jushers have been making $146.20) jweekly. while those at other! sporting events get $98.75. He! jsaid California,pari - mutuel ticket sellers make $30.60 a day and are the highest paid in the ination, | Joseph Detchemendy, presi- ident. of Local 280 of the Build- ing Service Employees Interna- tional Union, informed on the! picket line of the directors' dis- cussions, said: "If they want to cut it up, we jaren't in any position to object to it. But remember, a picket line is the laboring-mfan' slife! |line, We should be able to strike it we feel we have to." Detchemendy said that the pari - mutuel clerks are paid jmore, but have been handling jincreasingly large sums of jmoney each year with smaller and smaiier work forces. (Remember When ? . . .| Frank Chance, part of the famed infield combina- tion of Tinker to Evers to Chance, signed a $25,000 contract for three years to manage the New York Americans -- later Yankees --5l years ago today, It wasn't until 1921, under Miller Huggihts, that the club won its first American League pennant, AFRICAN LANGUAGE Swahili, spoken by 10,000,000 although | NEW YORK (CP) -- The of Canada's nine pro- fessional football teams ended three here Tuesday with work on their two major agenda items incomplete. But spokesmen for the Cana- dian Football League clubs said progress was made on both, One is the drafting of a 1964 schedule, to be approved by the CFL annual meeting in Edmon- ton Feb. 6-8. The other is the question of limiting the number of natural- ized U.S. players, of so-called "Canadianized imports," that each CFL club may carry. This also may be settled at the CSL meeting in Edmonton, League secretary Bob Gillies of Regina said after Tuesday's meeting that most of the day's discussién concerned the 1064 schedule. Gillies said that under the CFL's interlocking schedule ar- rangement, each western team plays two games in the East. In the past, these two games have been played only two or three days apart so the west- erm clubs would have to make only one trip East. Jim Finks of Calgary sug: jgested that one or two Western Conferenceteams make two sin- gie-game trips instead of one for two games, with the extra trav- elling costs being drawn from the West's share of the inter- |locking-games financial pool, Last season he set an NHL days of private meetings) zier and defenceman Ron In- em, WAS SUSPENDED y the 1061-62 season Young was suspended by Detroit for drawing needless penalties and during the same campaign was taken off the Red Wings' active list for twice missing practice. Four seasons ago Young, a Toronto native, was suspended by Rochester of the American ockey League for conduct det- rimental to the best interests of the club. With Hershey of the same league in the 1960-61 sea- son he was banned for parti- cipating in a stick - swinging duel, Young was jailed briefly last summer, the result of a restaur- ant- brawl. He received a sus- pended sentence. Temperamental H. Young} Suspended Indefinitely After Leaf-Hawk Fracas In Chicago, general manager Black Tommy Ivan of the Hawks said: "'I was on the other wit wont on jn the ponuity bem, w went on Therefore, , 1 cannot make any comment except to say I am! surprised that he is indefinitely suspended, I have not talked to Howié about it." Young called the suspension "silly" and said "'they're rail- roading me, "I think it's silly, What kind of setup is this when a club executive can go to the head of the league and get you sus- } pended," Young did not deny that he swore while in the penalty box. ' "Twas hot at 'em (officials and Leafs.) I got a bad call-on the HOWIE YOUNG For the last two seasons and so far in the current season Young has accumulated a total jof six misconduct penalties and jtwo game misconduct penalties. |The automatic fines totalled |$250. ice." Baseball Club Sale Depends On Stadium TORONTO (CP) -- Officials of the Toronto Maple Leat Base- ball Club confirmed the appoint- DEMPS, C NEW YORK (AP) -- An- other ghost from the past has risen to haunt Jack Demp- sey. Now they are claiming he used loaded gloves in 1919 when he won the world heavy- | weight boxing title from Jess | Willard. The story is told in the me- moirs of the late Jack. (Doc) Kearns, his manager at the time, as published in a copy- wighted feature in Sports Ilu- strated. Dempsey denies it in the same article. Kearns claimed he used plaster of. paris and water in bandaging. Dempsey's hands to insure a 10-to-1 bet of $10,- 000 that Dempsey would win in one round. Kearns lost, for due to a comedy of errors Dempsey won in three rounds Dempsey's ex-manager said the fighter was "'entirely in- nocent of what happened and stood there in what amounted to almost a stupor. I had to hide a smile as the call came to enter the ring. Every punch, landing with the hollow sound of a mallet crunching into a watermelon, raised knots on him or tore him open, NEVER DID IT AGAIN "In all his \subsequent car- eer Dempsey never inflicted such dreadful damage on an opponent. And he did it to this one in. the very first round. There may be those who will wonder how it could possibly be that Dempsey didn't know his gloves were loaded. PILOT CLAIMS USED LOADED MITTS "Actually, it isn't too sur- prising. He was young and this was the most unnerving day of his hungry life. After- ward, when I oracked off the bandages and ditched them, he was so dumb at being the heavyweight champion of the world that you could have hit him with a hammer and he wouldn't have blinked an eye." The article. quotes Dempsey as commenting: "Ridiculous! I could take an oath. In fact I will." A month ago, Benny Mar- shall of the Birmingham News wrote that. Dempsey had been doped before -his first fight with Gene Tunney in Phila- dejphia. At the time, Dempsey said hé was not sick the day of the fight but added: "A doctor told me the next day, I'd probably been given a mickey finn and I probably was ill for three or four days after that." WILLIARD HAD SUSPICION In. reference to the 1919 bout, Willard, now 82, told Sports Mustrated: "I'm glad that Kearns fin- ally was man enough to ad- mit it. The first time Demp- sey hit me, I knew the gloves were loaded. He knockei me down seven times, maybe eight, I don't recall exactly now, But every time he hit me, I could feel another bone or two breaking. I got robbed by the king of the robbers, I guess we could say. That Kearns. ment Tuesday of George "Sparky" Anderson as field manager, but shed little light on the reported sale of the club to several Toronto businessmen. Frank Pollock, club general manager, said at a press con- ference, however, that Ander- son would be the field manager the jues."" ber, in an interview following negotiations are being carried on for the sale of the club and said he thought the deal would hinge on the. condition of the stadium, ' He said engineers now checking the building, owned by the Toronto harbor commis- sion, and an estimate of cost of repairs is expected next week. The club is responsible for stad- ium upkeep. CONFIRMS TALKS the other detail. He said several other busi proposed purchase, $5,000 each in the deal. His asking price was reported to be $125,000. "no matter who was making out pay cheques. Club president Harry G. Kim- the conference, confirmed that are Sam Starr, one of two busi- nessmen reported interested in purchase of Jack Kent Cooke's team, confirmed nego- tiations were being held but would not comment on price or nessmen were involved in the It was reported that Starr, a manufacturer of children's clothing, and Robert L, Hunter, broker, headed. group of 10 sportsmen -who had invested Cooke, who has lived in Los Angeles for the last three years and who has invested $250,000 in the club, said in a recent telephone interview he wants the team to stay in Toronto but the price must be reasonable. Old-time gold great Gene Sarazen, now 61, and Mickey Wright, professional golfer just named The ited Press Woman Athlete the Year, embrace in a New York restaurant Tuesday. where both appeared to publicize a television show. 'This girl," SARAZEN LAUDS MICKEY' WRIGHT said Sarazen,. "tis: ¢he ' finest" woman . golfer 'singe. "Joyce: laus she could' give' the ° male pros a run' for th mone; BRUINS BLANKED Garners By THE CANADIAN PRESS The Boston Bruins might have been better off just forget- ting about the scheduled Nov. 24 meeting with the Detroit Red Wings, postponed because of The game was moved-up to Tuesday night and the Bruins got clobbered 5-0 by the Wings as diminutive Roger Crozier re- corded his second shutout of the a » both against the Bru- ins. é Tt was a good example of what Boston. coach Milt Schmidt has been saying all along: The Bruins must score more goals and beat second di- vision clubs like Detroit and New York if they hope. to make the National playoffs. SINKING INTO CELLAR The Beantowners let 29 shots fly at 145-pound Orozier but the 2l-year-old rookie turned them back. The loss dropped the Bru- ins further into the cellar, six points behind New York and 11 back of fourth-place Detroit and last playoff spot. President Kennedy's assassina-| tion Hockey League Rookie Crozier Shutout | f Bratras 3 ee, 2, ne il Five Wings shared; the..scors ing with Alex Delvecchio; Norm Ellman' and Gordie Howe--De- e--De- froit's old giard--emerging as the "tik. pomeeenht ' sat fa, tee eh os Howe picked up: two, assists.;. Floyd Smith opened the»scors ing late in. the first period..as the Wings began a 42-shot Rar rage at, Bruins. goalie Ed John- ston before. a sparse crowd $e ta the. second { Ullman rapped. pe- riod. markers. 2 He a ae It was Boston's ninth consec- utive game in @ Tow witout § victory.' > -< re The NHL features anothér two points 'behind the " ens in third place while real is bw got "back league + ing® J a |hope to' gain 'ground me in Toronto. : BALTIMORE (AP)--A grand jury Tuesday that ad- vance examination of boxers in Maryland has been inadequate. At the same time, it was re- ported that a preliminary LAST NIGHT'S STARS fighter on a card in which an- other was injured fatally is par- tially blind. The grand jury investigated the death of heavyweight Ernie ----|"By THE CANADIAN PRESS Goaltender Roger Crozier of Detroit, who posted his second misconduct penalty|Canadian hockey, were reported|Africans, has official status in/shutout of the season with a 29- coaches allowed play: to leave the benches. "ito be having financial iplayer difficulties. and |Kenya, Tanganyika and The Congo. jsave performance as the Wings) Knox, %, after he was knocked| out Oct. 14 in the ninth round by Wayne Bethea of New York? lished, Neai Eskridge wrote in the Baltimore News-Post that Bobby Hurtt probably will lose his sight in one eye. Vision in the other was saved by opera- tions. Hurtt, a 28-year-old father of five, said the damage came in the third round of an eight- round middleweight bout with Freddy Jackson of Chicago, Jackson won a split decision. DIED AFTER FIGHT The 26-year-old Knox died of Before the report was pub- a cerebral hemorrhage 32 hours Boxers Medical Exam Pelted By Grand Jury after the fight in the Civic Cen- tre. A medical examiner later reported that the body only 153 nds. His weight for the fight been announced at 178, compared with: 205 for Be- thea. The weight disparity prompted the grand juny inves- tigation. It found no criminal reg aon or --e nor ii any charges a individuals. orn It did find "a minimal and to- tally inadequate pre-fight medi- cal examination without a de- idumped last place Bost 5-0. / HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS 3 Dozen Canadian Coaches Lobby U.S. Football Men | NEW YORK (CP) -- About) There's no limit on the num-; The NFL and AFL have ait added to Edmonton's nego- doren Canadian foothall per of players--in fact, the Ca. draft system managers and players | nadian Football League parti have been playing a special of game here and no. other means to claim rights to any + It's something called "patrol- those from the U.S. National|formation on those sleepers. lobby," or just Wain there's and Only ." Occasionally oc- broad rees to and American and! 'The Canadia no official scorekeeper. have been extremely active, as\Trimble hurried across the the players themselves|, few hours of lobby-watching|!obby to keep an appointmeni, participants aré likely to know who is mak- shows. ipays off later--or as Jim Trim |ble of Montreal Alouettes said: "Liaison, that's what we're es around any more." For the individual CFI, team'}2 Private confab in the club's|to settle CFL problems. But be-| ,|peders renewed Argonauts talking quietly with itwo college coaches. In another, |Argo backfielder Jackie Parker is talking with others. \there. aren't many of those = assistant, Jim Champion,'sydney Halter and the s three or four upstairs for Here's how it operates: Theithe awards may include the|botel suite. of gional teams the hotel lobby and cor-/NFL player who doesn't fit into/stopping for a handshake -here, is current team's plans. for|a conversation there. Eskimo|showing more Canadian game: year--for its negotiation/lineman Roger Nelson joins two in the U.S. S| ' | Once on the negotiation list}men for lunch. He's already) jof one CFL team, that player|wired the name of one jis out of bounds to other CFLiplayer to the CFL commission-\can't be reported who's. wia- ler's office in Winnipeg to haye tiation list. There was Bud Grant of Win- college player, so the best they nipeg, bending to speak to a) this week,|Cipants are outnumbered by\can hope for is some inside in- ishorter man. Bob Shaw of Sas- |katchewan 'Roughriders to w- jered above those around him. | of Calgary Stam- an acquaint- | ith: "'How's the pro- Raiph Sazio who won Grey Cup tie his first year as the tablishing. We may find out) Head coach Dave Skrien of|head man with Hamilton Tiger- jabout a sleeper (an unknown/British Columbia Lions speaks|Cats was there, too. lwhe has good potential) but/With a man near the elevators. i Upstairs, commi G By THE CANADIAN PRESS WLT F APt 2110 7122 8549 1910 $121 9646 1911 6103 86 44 1317 7 88107 33 New York 1120 6 105 122 28 Boston 722 8 72115 22 | Tutsday's Results Detroit 5 Boston 6 | , Games Wednesday Montreal at Toronto American League Eastern Division Ww Hershey Chicago Montreal 'Toronto Detroit Saess9 RSet Baltimore 9 Quebec 6 Tonight's Games iP at Buffalo y 'team managers met privately to try tween sessions, they conferred the profes-/name of a college football) Eagle Keyes of Edmonton Es-'with other interests, too, prob- simply roam/player--or even an AFL orjkimds moves about the lobby,jably including U.S. television jexecutives on possibilities of Nobody was telling the score "'}.S. for publication, however, so it Kitchener ining. hh |Pittsburgh at Hershey Ontario Junior A WLTt 23 4 Pt 51 43 6 Toronto 5 Montreal 2191 Peterbor'gh 1510 6 St. Cath'ines 1513 3 4 6 5 1 9332 18 139 24 619 5 102 14917 422 4 67 165 12 Tuesday's Results |Montreal 2 Oshawa 3 Niagara Falls 1412 |Oshawa 918 Hamilton 36) 33) Kitchener 4 St. Catharines 6 Toronto at Peterborough St. Catharines at Oshawa Western League Denver 1 Vancouver 3 tailed..necordation of the results of such examinations." It recommended stricter ex- amination of fighters, filing de- tailed past records of boxers, and denial of promoter licenses to anyone with a criminal rec- ord. If not adopted, the jurors urged "then that professional boxing be abolished in the state of Maryland." Seattle 2 Los Angeles 4 '¥ International League Moines 2 Windsor 1 Eastern League Philadelphia 4 Knoxville 6 Greensboro-5 Charlotte 3 Nova Scotia Senior Moncton 5 Halifax 7 Ottawa-St. Lawrence Benior Cornwall 3 Ottawa 10 Ontario Senior Woodstock 7 Port Colborne 3 Thunder Bay Senior Red Rock 2 Fort William 3 Ottawa-Hull Junior Hawkesbury 2 Hull 7 Saskatchewan Junior \Moose Jaw 6 Weyburn 3 Ontario Junior B Tillsonburg 3 Sarnia 14 Stratford 11 Owen Sound 6 St. Mary's 7 Ingersoll 5 London 5 St. Thomas 3 Kingston 2 Peterborough 7 Exhibition (SJHL) 4 Brandon | Estevan \(MJHL) 5 Ontario Senior 'WiuLt fF Ar 15 4 1117 7031 13 5 3 98 6529 12 8 1103 8525 Oakville 1012 6 82 100 20 |Guelph 814 1 80 9617 'Port Colborne 7" © 66130 8 | Woodstock Galt |Welland weighed|in the Ontario Hockey Associa- 4th Junior A By THE CANADIAN PRESS Montreal Junior Canadiens had intentions of closing to within six points of first place tion Junior A series Tuesday night--but Oshawa Generals and Danny O'Shea had different ideas. The sixth-place Generals, be- hind a three-goal outburst 'by O'Shea, edged the Canadi St. Catharines Gains - eS Position - by St. Catharines with 33,, Ni- agara Falls 32, h 4, Hamilton 17 and. Kitchener W. SIX IN ACTION ~ "Six of the eight 'clubs are in night _ when 3-2 in Bowmanville to take a seven-point lead 'over Hamilton Red Wings for the last plavoff spot. The Wings have three games in hand, In other action, St. Cathar- ines Black Hawks dumped the cellar<iwelling Kitchener Rang- ers 64 to move into fourth place in the standings. The win gave Hawks a one-point edge over Niagara Falls Flyers. "Toronto Martboros lead the parade with 51 points, a mar- gin of eight over Montreal. Pe- terborough Petes are in third place with 36 points, followed' THRIFT LINE CAR RADIOS A good quality transistor- ized car radio complete with aerial, trim 'plated, speaker and installation. 12 volt manual only, ... DOMINION TIRE STORES 48 BOND WEST 3 955 INSTALLED PRICE models as Ford, Dodge, Renault, models, all transistor, in-the-desh CLEARING CAR RADIO CLEARANCE | Limited quantity, mostly one-of-a-kind cer radios for such , Dauphine, ete. h models, © BUDGET TERMS © NO RED TAPE--we do our own financing. * (Corner of Church) LIMITED 725-650: a _ --(AP Wirephote) E4: Joyal. and Doug: ce RR ani te OE I NE ROE RET

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