ste ene stl actin ale la sa iin wan eel atin ee ole GG THE OBHAWA TIMES, Mondey, February, 3, 1964 Pope Rousseaus 5 Goals Major Highlight Of 'Week-End NHL Play 'By MARVEN MOSS Against the Bruins, John Mc- Press Staff Writer ce eg gel es laut es from Stan. Mikita,|twice for awks a n eae Hull. and one or two|Murphy rounded out the attack. ®thers, no one performing with fHicago Black Hawks is doing much with the puck these days. "They had Hull muzzied in the National Hockey League's eekend play. But Mikita's Production helped give the awks back a share of the No, T'spot in the standings. Bellicose Stan supplied a pair a two-goal games and Chicago pped the Bruins 5-2 in Boston nday night after riding Mi- ta's work to. a 2-2 tie with the Rangers in a Saturday aft- rnoon game at New York, » Red Sullivan's Rangers, the fase of the league at the mo- ment, bounded ahead of the siump-ridden Detroit Red Wings qeanwhile by upending Mont- eal Canadiéns 4-2 at home Sun- day night. SoA. five-goal binge by lithe Bobby Rousseau--the most re- 'markable scoring feat by one man in 10 NHL seasons-- marked a 9-3 thrashing the Ca- nadiens gave the Red Wings in Montreal Saturday night. geIn. other games, the Red Wings salvaged a 2-2 saw-off with Toronto Maple Leafs in Detroit Sunday night and the Leafs creamed the Bruins 5-1 in Toronto Saturday night. HAWKS, HABS TIED. The Hawks slipped into a 60- point tie with the Canadiens-- although Montreal has a game ih hand--with the win before a fall house of 13,909 in Boston. " Mikita's two goals--added to his pair Saturday--gave him 29 for the campaign, second only to Hull's 33 in the league list- ings six--pumped in by Detroit's Syd Howe in 1044. «With 155 goals, the Black Hawks have produced more than anyone else around the league. The firepower is con- ted in Mikita, Hull, Ken harram (25) and Red Hay (47). Together they have ac- rookie two seasons ago, counted three times on slapshots, once on a breakaay capped by an artistic bit of stickwork and rounded things off with a freak- ish scoring payoff from a cor- Orland Kurteribach and young Gary Dornhoefer were the Bos- ton goal-getters. Vic Hadfield and Camille Henry matched Mikita's effort va afternoon in New ork, HENRY INJURED But the Rangers lost 24-goal man Henry in bowling over the Canadiens Sunday night, Both games at Madison Square Gar- beng drew sellout crowds of 15,- 25. Henry was reported to have suffered an inflamed vein in his left thigh and there was no in- dication how long he would be sidelined, Rod Gilbert, Earl Ingarfield, Hadfield and Don Marshall, the one-time Canadien, scored to push the Rangers into fourth place in the standings ahead of the Red Wings. It was New York's tenth win against three setbacks and a pair of ties since the start of the year. That's the hottest mark around the league. Rookie John Ferguson and Claude Provost counted for the Canadiens. It was goal No. 20 for Gilbert and carried him to a personal bonus level. Rousseau's five ogais before a crowd of 14,893 Saturday night was a feat no one has been able to perform since his teammate Bernie Geoffrion turned the trick in 1955. The NHL's all-time. record is seven goals--set by Joe Malone of the old Quebec Bulldogs in 1920--and the modern mark is Rousseau, the NHL's prize ona for more than two- of the team's aggregate. ner passout. The goaltending by. Detroit's om wer Crozier was per- aps not as sharp as it might have been. But Crozier--who al- ternates with Terry Sawchuk-- could not be faulted entirely. His defence gave him miserly support. Yvan Cournoyer, a junior farm hand winding a five. game stint with the adiens, clicked for two, goals and Billy Hicke and Gilles Tremblay added one each, Henri Richard meanwhile piled up five assists. For Detroit Alex Delvecchio scored twice and Norm Ullman got the other goal. Detroit's young centre Eddie Joyal and Montreal's journey- man defenceman Jean-Guy Tal- bot were both injured, Joyal's left wrist snapped in two places when he was checked and he is expected to play no. more this season. Talbot suffered a severe charley horse and it's not known how long he'll be out, DETROIT FIGHTS BACK Before 14,421 fans in Detroit, the Red Wings twice battled back after being down a goal to hold Toronto even, Parker Mac- Donald and Uliman got their goals while Frank Mahovlich and Dave Keon scored for the Leafs. It was Mahovlich's 19th goal of the season. Sawohuk was back in De- troit's net and he made 23 stops, 19 fewer than Toronto's Johnny Bower. Bob Pulford scored twice and picked up an assist in leading the Leafs to their home-ice win before a crowd of 14,255. George Armstrong, Ron Stew- art and Billy Harris shared the other Toronto scoring and Bob Nevin helped set up three goals. For the Bruins, it was Dorn- hoefer who averted the shutout. The league is quiet until Wed- nesday night when the schedule tosses the Maple Leafs in Toronto, the Bruins against the Rangers in New York and the Red Wings against Chicago. the Canadiens against the Black Hawks in Petra Burka Thinks r ' i] : Lf oes « INNSBRUCK, Austria (CP)-- 'Petra Burka set her sights Sun- ay on a gold medal in wom- ven's figure skating at the 1968 'Winter Olympics. 4 The 17 - year - old Dutch. born high school student from 'Toronto placed third Sunday in 1964 Olympic champion- points out of second place. "I wasn't worried about mov- ing up to a silver medal," she said. "I was just worried about someone moving up to the bronze." From now on, she added, her [oa will be the gold medal in hips, barely missing a second-|j9¢¢ place silver medal. , "I couldn't have asked for more," the young Canadian hampion said after she'd fin- dshed behind Sjoukje Dijkstra of The Netherlands and Regine 'Heitzer of Austria. » "When I left Canada, I didn't 'expect to take any medals. t "But after I placed third in school figures, I realized I had) 'a chance and from then on I Just concentrated on keeping my place." * Miss Burka had trailed Miss Heitzer by 24.6 points after the five compulsory. school figures. Petra's mother and coach, Dutch-bom Mrs. Ellen Burka, who was national champion of The Netherlands in 1946, said she was contented that Petra received the bronze medal and not a higher one. "Petra is still only 17. She has many good years of skating ahead of her." GETS CONFIDENCE VOTE There was cause for joy in another quarter of the Canadian Skating camp Sunday, when judge Dr. Suzanne Morrow Newmarket, Ont., Francis of Toronto, constantly} 'Bronze Medal Only Step Towards Title ing was over, she was only §.5|vote of confidence from the chief referee, Mrs. Morrow Francis, who teamed with Wally Distelmeyer to win the pairs bronze medal in the 1948 Olympics, said the referee told her he had checked "all my scores and found that good job." . If the referee feels any judge has marked poorly he has the jright to send a letter asking \that the judge explain how he larrived at his score. She quoted the referee as say- Lidia Skoblikova, 24, a Rus- sian schoolteacher, !s shown after winning the 3,000-meter | speed skating race Sunday for her fourth victory in the Win- ter Olympics at Innsbruck, Austria. She thus became the first athlete in Winter Olym- By THE CANADIAN PRESS A few weeks ago it would have been almost ridiculous to suggest Montreal Junior Cana- diens could catch Toronto Marl- boros in the Ontario Hockey As- sociation Junior A series stand- ings. But now it doesn't appear to be such an impossible task. The Canadiens, who not too long ago were trailing the Marl- ros by 11 points, Sunday pulled within five points of the league - leading Marlboros by walloping Kitchener Rangers 10-4. Toronto didn't help its own cause by dropping a 5-2 deci- sion to the surging St. Cathar- ines Black Hawks, For the Black Hawks it was their ninth straight game without a loss. The only other scheduled af- fair of the weekend saw the sixth - place Oshawa Generals |practically shatter Hamilton's hopes of gaining a playoff berth by shading the Red Wings 6-5. A wild brawl broke out in the third period in Montreal, that in- volved 13 players and resulted in 100 minutes in penalties in- I had been very fair and did alcjuding game - misconduct - misconducts to Montreal's Bob Lemieux and Kitchener's Bob Jones and Randy Legge. QUEBEC BONSPIEL ing, "I am not going to write to you--you are judging well." Mrs, Morrow Francis, who of- ten marks lower than the other eight judges and draws whistles and catcalls from the specta- tors, left the ice in tears after judging the pairs last week in which Canadians Guy Revell of and Debbie Wilkes of Unionville, Ont., won When Sunday night's freeskat-iheckled by the crowds, won a'a bronze medal. . HOCKEY SCORES AND STANDINGS "By THE CANADIAN PRESS | * National League |Cincinnati 2 St. Paul 10 7 WLT F APt|St. Louis 5-Omaha 8 Montreal 25 14 10 148 124 60 Tuesday's 'Game Chicago 25 15 10 155 113 60|Omaha at St. Louis | Toronto 2317 $130 121 54 Western League New York 18 23 8 143 157 44 WLT F APti par 17 22 9 119 146 43 Denver 3416 2205 141 70 oston 1229 9116 150 33\Los Angeles 23 23 4 168 177 50 Saturday's Results | Seattle 22 22 4 180 152 48 Detroit 3 Montreal 9 San Fran. 23 25 2 139 189 48 Boston 1 Toronto 5 Portland 20 25 5 160 170 45 Qhicago 2 New York 2 Vancouver 18 29 3 163 186 39 W Sunday's Results Montreal 2 New York 4 'onto 2 Detroit 2 | Chicago 5 Boston 2/ » American League . Eastern Division ' WLT F APt Quebec 29 22 0 187 167 58) Hershey 26 20 2 152156 54 Baltimore "2127. 4145 168 46 pringficld S27 Lapin syi Niagara Falls 2015 6 155 125 46 . Peterbor'gh 19 16 7132 141 45 Q Westerm Division |Oshawa 15 21 6173 182 36 Cleveland 29:16 3173 126 61) Hamilton 726 8 145 206 22 Pittsburgh 26 21. 2.163 141 54/ Kitchener 532 5 9323815 chester 24 21 0 166 149 48) Sunday's Results| uffalo 1527 5 124179 35!-roronto i ' Saturday's Results | Rochester 2 Cleveland 6 -- 4 Hershey 3 | uebec 0 Pittsburgh 5 Buffalo 4 Springfield 4 4 Sunday's Results Springfield 1 Buffalo 4 Hershey 2 Pittsburgh 2 Cleveland 3 Providence 5 Quebec 6 Rochester 7 Central Professional 8 WLT F APt Omaha 31 9 5199 124 67) §t. Louis 24 21 7 233 197 55 inneapolis 2221 6 195 189 0 St. Paul 23 34 2.170 166 48 Cincinnati 7 32 6 116 237 20) . Saturday's Result | St. Louis 5 Omaha 4 | Toronto Sunday's Results Saturday's Results Dc.iver 5 Los Angeles 3 Portland 3 Seattle 5 Sunday's Results San Francisco 3 Portland 6 Vancouver 2 Seattle 10 Ontario Junior A J WLT F APt 28 6 7 235 147 63 27:12 4 225 146 58 2215 5 191 164 49 Montreal St: Cath'ines 2 St. Catharines 5 Kitchener 4 Montrea] 10 Oshawa 6 Hamilton 5 Tuesday's Games Kitchener at Oshawa |Toronto at Niagara Falls Hamilton at Peterborough SATURDAY International League |Port Huron 2 Muskegon 0 |\Toledo 4 Fort Wayne 8 Chatham 4 Des Moines 3 Eastern League New Haven 0 Clinton 9 Long Island 7 Philadelphia 6 Nashville 2 Johnstown 4 Greensboro 3 Knoxville 4 Nova Scotia Senior Halifax 6 Windsor 12 New Glasgow 2 Moncton 8 iSt. Thomas 5 Sarnia ¢ Northern Ontario Senior Saskatchewan Senior Winnipeg 4 Saskatoon 5 Regina 11 Moose Jaw 10 Saskatchewan Junior All-Stars 6 Estevan 2 Senior Intercollegiate Montreal 7 McMaster 6 Waterloo 2 Montreal 9 Ott-St. Lawrence Intercolgte Royal Military College 4 Sir George Williams 4 SUNDAY International League Toledo 3 Windsor 3 Fort Wayne 2 Port Huron 4 Chatham 2 Des Moines 5 Eastern League Philadelphig 1 New Haven 5 Clinton 2 Long' Island 2 Nashville 4 Johnstown 2 Knoxville 2 Greensboro 4 Cape Breton Senior Glace Bay 5 Antigonish 2 Ottawa-St. Lawrence Senior |Kingston 5 Cornwall 3 |Lancaster 2 Hull 8 } Ontario Senior |Woodstock 3 Oakville 6 couldn't match his experience and delicate making. |DECIDE 7 EVENTS Oshawa's Bert White Wins Industrial Trophy | QUEBEC (CP) -- Strategy |paid off for Robert Lahaie Sat- urday as he skipped his Cap- de-la-Madeleine, Que., rink to a grand slam in the Quebec In- ternational Bonspiel. Holding a comfortable 9-6 lead after 10 ends of the 12- end final for the Lieutenant- |Governor's Trophy, Lahaie de- Rouyn-Noranda 2 Kapuskasing |liberately let Don Schaeffer of 7 |Montreal's suburban Baie \d'Urfe Curling Club take one on jthe 11th end. | The move enabled the former {Quebec champic to come home safely with last rock and a 9-7 lead in the final end. He picked br Fg more anc won the event 10-7. | The Lieutenant - Governor's jprize gave Lahaie a sweep of \the bonspiel, winning three ma- ..jjor events in 11 straight victor- ies without a loss. Earlier, he had captured the Francois Jo- bin Trophy and the grand ag- gregate. Schaeffer, his rink only to- gether for little more than a year, gave Lahaie a fight but opponent's shot- Seven other events were de- cided Saturday with Ontario |picking up three prizes, Nova |Scotia two, Quebec City one and |the United States. one. Galt 7 Port Colborne 3 Guelph 2 Welland 6 Northern Ontario Senior | Timmins 2 Rouyn-Noranda 3 | \Kapuskasing 7 Abitibi 0 | Ottawa-Hull Junior BASKETBALL SCORES Hull 3 Cornwall 6 Brockville 2 Pembroke 4 Ottawa 8 Hawkesbury 5 | Northern Ontario Junior -- 6 Garson-Falconbridge Boston 119 San Francisco 125 New York 106 By THE CANADIAN PRESS NBA SATURDAY Philadelphia 111 iSault, Mich. 2 Sault, Ont, 6 |Los Angeles 96 St. Louis 113 Espanola 5 North Bay 7 Thunder Bay Junior Detroit 112 Baltimore 111 SUNDAY Port Arthur'5 Fort Wiliam Hur-/San Francisco 120 Baltimore ricances 2 Ontario Junior B Cincinnati 109 Boston 117 'St. Louis 107 Los Angeles 105 Montreal Juniors Are Nearing Top | RUSSIAN TEACHER WINS FOUR GOLD MEDALS pic history to win four gold medals. She previously had taken the 500, 1,000 and 1,500- meter speed skating events. "MINNGBRUCK, Austria (CP)-- Games hit the halfway mark in its 12-day program today, leav- ing behind a_ history-making weekend in which the girls stole the limelight. Here's how the girls did it: 1, Lidia Skoblikeva, the So- viet Union's speedskating sen- sation, took her fourth gold medal of the Games when she won the women's 3,000-metre skate Sunday to complete a sweep unprecedented in Winter' Olympics history, ae The 24-year-old Siberian school teacher won the 1,000- metre race Saturday in record- breaking time and she took the 500- and 1,500-metre skates be- fore that, 2. Christine and Marielle Goit- schel of France finished first and second in the women's slalom ski race Saturday, be- coming the first sisters ever to place' one-two in a Winter Olym- pics event 3. While Queen Juliana of The Netherlands and 11,000 others watched Sunday night, Sjoikje Dijkstra become the first Dutch girl to win the women's figure- skating gold medal, Her victory returned the Olympic championship to the Continent for the first time since Norway's Sonja Henie won her third Olympic crown in 1936, Canada fared well in only two of the eight weekend finals --and did best in the women's figure skating. There, Petra Burka of Tor- onto, 17-year-old Dutch - born girl who two weeks ago cap- tured the Canadian champion- ship, won a bronze medal as she finished third--barely miss- ing the second-place silver OLYMPIC GAMES HOCKEY RATING medal as she 'outskated every- one except Miss Dijkstra in freeskating. Regine Heitzer of Austria, su- perior in compulsory figures, Montreal's Yvan Cournoyer, who has been dividing his time between the Junior Canadiens and the National Hockey League parent club, registered two goals--his 47th and 48th of the season, Saturday night Cournoyer chipped in a pair of goals as the NHL Canadiens dumped Detroit Red Wings 9-3. Andre Boudrias, the league's top scorer, and Rene Drolet also fired two goals each, The others were divided among Serge Sevard, Mike Hyndman, Chrisitan Bordeleau and Bob Charlebois, Trevor Fahey had a pair for the Rangers while Tommy Miller and Gord Ken- negiesser had one each, Chuck Kelly paced the Black Hawks with a two-goal effort on home ice. Single goals went to captain Fred Stanfield, Joe) |Kish and Brian McDonald, Ron} |Ellis and Brit Selby counted for the visitors. Wayne Cashman and George Vail showed the way for the Generals, in. Hamilton, each clicking for a pair of goals, Bill Little and Ron Buchanan fired one each. Hamilton marks- men were Real Lemieux, Fred Speck, Peter Loveless, Sandy |Snow and John DeDiana. W. B. White of Oshawa swamped Bob Gillingham of Bridgewater, N.S., 10-2 to take the Industrial Acceptance Tro- phy, B. Bolthauzer of Burling- ton, Ont., beat MacFendley of Barrie, 13-8 to win the Goodwill Shield and Toronto's Neil Spei- cher captured the Weymand Shield with an 11-6 trouncing of Quebec's Tony Demers. Jake Creighton of Dartmouth and H. S. Fulton of Lunenburg brought trophies home to Nova Scotia, Creightua taking the < quet Trophy by walloping Or- val Archer of Kirkland Lake 11-2 and Fulton winning the Val d@'Or Trophy 9-8 over Jim Bur- ney of Burl. zton, Ont. The host city picked up te Birk's Tray with Quebec's Jacques Girard beating W. S. Black of Falconbridge, Ont.. 10-7 and Ernest Slaybaught took the Quebec City Cup to New York City with a 10-5 win over Alen Decourcy of Sault Ste. | Marie, Ont. The ninth Winter Olympic|by Hirst medal of any kind at the In '64 Olympic Games ing of the weekend was made bobsiedders Vic Emery of Montreal and Peter Kirby of St. Jovite, Que., who gave their country a fourth place in the two-man boblet where. Canada was making its first bid in Olympic competition. BRITAIN'S FIRST MEDAL Tony Nash and Robin Dixon of Britain won the boblet gold medal, giving their country its Winter Games since 1952 when Jeannette Altwegg won the women's figure skating. Italy's two favored two-man bobsled crews, Sergio Zardini and Romano Bonagura in one and Eugenio Monti and Sergio|i Siorpaes in the other, took the silver and bronze medals, re- spectively, In Saturday's other final, three Soviet women placed 1-2-3 in the women's 15-kilometre (9.3- mile) cross-country ski race, with Claudia Boyarskikh, another 24-year-old teacher, winning the gold. Eero Maentyranta, Finnish customs inspector who won the 30-kilometre (18.6-mile) men's cross-country ski race earlier, gave the men's side its first double winner Sunday. The 24-year-old Laplander sped to victory in the men' sl5- kilometre cross-country and now stands a chance to become a triple. gold medallist. He is favored in Wednesday's 50-kil- ometre (30%-mile) cross-coun- ry. HOPES DASHED Austria's hopes for a triple champion in alpineskiing were dashed Sunday when Egon Zimmermann, the downhill champion, fell and broke a ski in the men's giant slalom. Francois Bonlieu, 27, a Frenchman who had frequently fallen in the two previous Win- ter Olympics ski events, sped down the 75-gate, 1,500-metre course in Lizum Valley Sunday 3 pie record speed skating Saturday as she finished in one minute 33.2 sec- onds to clip nine-tenths of a sec- ond off the previous mark. MISSED RECORD ord-breaking five minutes Sunday's 3,000 metres, but the ice was slow and she finished the 1.86-mile distance in 5:14.9, six-tenths of a second off her record set in the 1960 Olympics when she won the 1,500- and 3,000-metre championships. difficulty ~ elsewhere, streams of water down the Igis bobsled run and cancelling Sun- day's four-man bobsled prac- < $ ' Girls Grab Limelight Finland was next best wit! five--three gold, one silver and one bronze. France had two golds and two silvers, Austria a_ gold, bronze, TWO FOR CANADA : two. silvers and a 4 Canada had two bronze med- als--the other one won by yf Revell of Newmarket, Ont., Debbie Wilkes of Unionville, Ont., in pairs figure skating, inion' The United States, whose 109- member team is the t here, had only one bronze--won by Jean Saubert in the women's slalom Saturday, In the unofficial team stand- ngs, the Soviet Union had @ whopping 103% points after 12 of the 34 championships had been decided. Finland 4g, based on the traditional 16-5-4 3-2-1 scoring system for the first six places in each final. Canada was points. ninth with 11 Mrs. Skoblikova set an Olym- in the 1,000-metre She was shooting for a rec- in A warm wind wafted over the Olympic area Sunday, melting the ice on the outdoor artificial ice oval and pools of water went. squirting kova's skates as she sped to victory. from Mrs. Skobli- The temperatures also caused: sending : tices A took the silver medal by a 5.5-/for the giant slalom gold medal. ' Group A (championship) point margin over Miss Burka, Austria's Karl Schranz and The sence ~-- finals, WLT F APtlwho became only the second|Pepi Steigler finished floral at loaat Tig Wednesday Russia 3 0 0 27 6 6/Canadian to win a medal injand third, respectively. rags ag possibility arose 'thet Canada 3 0.0 15 3 6)women's figure skating at the) Mrs. Skoblikova's fantastic| ican men" webeed eae C'slovakia 2 1 0 20 8 4/Olympics. Barbara Ann Scott of|sweep of the speed - skating!) 4.ieq Thursday would have Sweden 210 15 7 4/Ottawa was the first--she wonjevents helped Russia boost its 4 ba callcallaal y Seer as ES a IL Zithe gold in 1948. medal total to 14--six gold, four c : in ates i -|silver and four bronze. Germany s56 4 Be Second-best Canadian show id Ar D 4 Switzerland 030 0 27 0 Three e Vea Saturday's Results Russia 15 Swit .erland 0 Czechoslovakia 4 Finland 0 Sweden 7 United States 4 Sunday's Results Sweden 7 Finland 0 Canada 4 Genmany 2 Today's Schedule Canad. vs. "'nited States Tuesday's Schedule Russia vs. Finland Czechoslovakia vs. Switzerland Sweden vs. Germany Group B (co: lation) Poland 2200.10 3 Japan 20010 7 Austria 2:0 0.9 3 Yugoslavia p Bat Fe a > OR | Norway 120 14 10 Italy 120 18 Romania 021 10 17 Hungary 930° 4:9 Saturday's Results Austria 3 Hungary 0 Yugoslavia 5 Italy 3 Sunday's Results Norway 9 Italy 2 |Romania 5 Yugoslavia 5 Today's Schedule Austria vs,. Japan Hungary vs, Poland Tuesday's Schedule Japan vs. Yugoslavia A NEW LOOK? Cassius MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Behind the wagging jawbone and the corny burlesque comedy, Cas- 4 sius Clay is a clean-cut, intel- 4 ligent young man with fast |hands and feet and sincere con- fidence in his ability to take the heavy-weight boxing title from 2 Sonny Liston. 1 In his modest Miami home oinestied among the pink and black Cadillacs and the big. gaudy bus proclaiming "The |World's Most Colorful Fighter," jthe 22-year-old Cassius was in| fo; |the kind of serious, thoughtful }mood the fan never sees. | He had been told that his iclowning: act, which had pumped new life into a tired fight racket, now was turning sour. His challenge of the pow- erful Liston was not being Lachine Man Heads Canada's 7 aie Pston the favorite Canoe Squad CARLETON PLACE, Ont;|got an earful of me and they (CP) -- Frank Clement of the|began rooting for Liston to shut): Lachine Racing Canoe Club,/me up. I'll be fighting him and was selected Satur-|the fans, too. day as manager of the Cana--MADE BIG FIGHTS Montreal, dian Olympic canoe team tha will take part in the Olympic|lot of big money fights that Games in Japan in October. Harry Ford, a member of the|8@st in history. same club, was named chair- - nse of age Olympic Selection|C ommittee Friday night at the annual meeting / the Cana-|28¢ Of $76 apiece, and they'll all dian Canoe Association, The meeting selected Jin. Mossman of Toronto's Balmy Beach Canoe Club as coach of the Olympic canoe team, The meeting set July 31 as 'hey don't judge me on exper- ya tence and boxing. ability." s the tentative date for the O1 pic canoe trials in Ottawa, Thi taken seriously. | "I don't worry about how the) |people feel," he said. 'Sure, I |know they keep coming out to jsee some fighter button the jof the fans. He used to be the jvillain--a meane x-convict--and |people wanted to see him beat. \Then I came along and they t) "I talk and holler. I made a way. I made this one the big- "There are 16,000 seats in the onvention Hall at Miami Beach, and they cost an aver- |be sold. With the theatre tele- vision, this will be a $7,000,000 fight. I built all that with my 2ig_ mouth. I should shut up? |The troulbe with people is jthey listen to me jabber and Really Good Guy Clay Is Publicly, Clay has predicted that he will stop Liston in five rounds. But now all the ballyhoo was laid aside. He admitted that Liston is the stronger, "is pretty fast," is better developed in pro fighting, and 'might not fall." IS 6AME SIZE But he revealed, also that he has grown to Liston's size at 200 pounds and believes that he has the ring moves to overcome the champion's edge in brute ree. Liston has won 35 of 36 fights, 25 by knockouts. Clay has had only 19 pro fights but won them all, 15 by knockouts. "What the fans overlook," Clay said. "Is that I had 186 amateur fights. I'm and still growing, but I've been through the mill. "I had my first fight when I was 12 years old and ever since that day I've been aiming for next Feb. 25, when I'll win the heavyweight championship. In Hall Of Fame NEW YORK (AP) -- Six plays. ers, three of them still alive,' were voted into baseball's Hall of Fame by the veterans com- mittee Sunday. The committee considered only those who have been out of baseball 20 years. They are Burleigh Grimes, last of the legal spit ball pitch- ers; pitcher Urban (Red) Fa- ber, who spent all of his career with Chicago White Sox; out- fielder Heinie Manush; Millre Huggins, who managed New York Yankees to six pennants in 12 seasons, and two men who starred before the turn of the century -- pitcher Tim Keefe and general handyman John Montgomery Ward: : When you're driving on a snow- covered road and have to make @ stop quickly, the best way to do it is to (1) slam the brakes on hard? (2) roll down the window and signal? (3) turnoff the ignition and apply the parking brake? (4) pump the brake pedal? *Ppys esnDd Pjno> uo sexo1q oy Buywwnys '(y) S90] pidos "joys uy sexoaq . @yy duind pjnays noi. 'enBne, AjojDg OL1DIUD ey ©} Bu|proooy CIA Co-operators Insurance Association Co-operators Life Insurance Association: HOW'S YOUR DRIVING IQ? will be the day preceding the annual Canadian championship: here Aug. 1. 7*\ NIAGARA LOANS NY, Always there with ready cash... For Bill Consolidation or any good reason. | | | | NIAGARA FINANCE $5020 to $5,0000° COMPANY LIMITED 240 Brariches from Coast to Coast 286 KING ST. W. 728-1636 ' "|| 5.00 | DOWN Hd, WEEK 4 BRAND NEW TIRES 4 -- 750-14 Dominion Royal | ENDURANCE BUYS 4-ply Tubeless Blackwall ]| Complete price 63.80 INSTALLED DOMINION TIRE STORES 1-Piece OLYMPIC CAR MATS Good Quality .. 4.95 ... 415 Full Front Full Rear. RG DOMINION 48 BO NO RED TAPE -- WE DO OUR DOMINION TIRE STORES LIMITED (Corner of Church) ND ST. WEST OWN FINANCING 725-6511 eanearenearen aes