Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jun 1964, p. 16

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a 6 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, June 24, 1964 GENE KINASEWICH 'Receives Top Award ee a. Set ee ee acts eel Paper Route Is |aren seas us nga seme! North-West Gets a 'Santa Claus chance in the Irish classic, over Pe Bs , t : ck to run . After) @ oe Bi M Rid his iene gukeny the 6thStraight Win 1g oney ] Wichita Beacon, he's back on . the track for more running. In wa Legion Tyke base- Big 45 Choice Several other owners of colts ported ready to throw in the To Young Miler When young Ryun has to runjball action Monday night, North- still officially entered were re- For Der by Race sponge and it seemed likely the in meets out of town--such as|West defeated North-East 8-5 at starting field would number! Wicuor, Kan. (AP) -- Jim the recent Compton Calif., Re-/Alexandra Park and South-Past lays where he posted a- 3:50.01 40, ed South-West at Eastview had homers for the losers, ] WINS South-East collected 10. hits off losing pitcher Stone and also received 10 walks. Winning pit- cher Mitchell gave up seven hits and struckottt.seven, while Mitchell fanned 10. Morris led South-East in hit- ting with two singles and a dou- LONDON (AP) -- Santa/, A 15 Claus, the hot favorite to win i Ryun, youngest miler ever to| mile--hi Saturday's Irish Derby at: the Odds quoted at the call-over| crack the four-minute mile, has cot gga oo Park. ble. Shearer paced South-West included 8-to-1 against Dilettante|many problems similar to other } 6 i with three singles. ' DUCKS HiT BY FIRE Jeff Stapleton won the game MRS. BENTLEY DIES Curragh Track Stak betting vchulee Tusrtaslit 10-to-l Lionhearted; 16-to-1|1/-year-old boys. ig choice es' ¥! Anselmo and King Paddy; One of them is money for T > 'HE PAS, Man. (CP) -- Fire/for North-West, striking out 13} gasKaTOON (CP) -- Mrs. at a call-over by London book- vot ny i; K'!@-to-1 Neptunus; 20-to- Crete; eta gcc ater pavoed which burned 15 square miles oflang allowing only three hits. Meanwhile, two American|%%*01 All Saved; 80-to-1 Devas-|for. He solves his problem like|"esting ground in The Pas areaithe victory was North-West's Matilda Bentley, 98, mother of owned horses were withdrawn,|tation; and 66-to-1 Master Buck|thousands of other youngsters re beg have netdene | sixth straight, the famed Bentley hockey fan They were Transpose and Bal-|and Red. Vagabond. acoss the country. Rackeosatatte -- fon -- Tom Taylor, Mike Clapp, ily, died Fsccges fiigel a@ lengthy dric II, winner of the one-mile} The akers didn't bother| He has a paper route. limited, a private conservation(L8tY Mathews, along Withlang Max, piayed in. the Ne Two Thousand Guineas. to quote prices on 18 other| He says it's about the onlylorganization, estimated some|Mike Eliott's second home run] tigng) Hockey League, Doug, of the season, were the hittersiyjay Jack, Roy and Scoon °t one time formed a family Gary Allisson and MacMahon!hockey team. To Silence Critics ee eh aetetet-ietahes a | Baldric If ran poorly in the|horses still entered but in mostjjob he's found that fits in with|115,000 duck ckling: 1%4-mile Epsom Derby, won by|cases unlikely to face the start-|his strenuous running schedyle.|adult birds Sad Soil tore de.|for North-West. Santa Claus, and it was de-|jing tape. STARR After delivering morning étli-'stroyed. FURNITURE APPLIANCES honored graduates. He became the first student from outside the United States to win the William J. Bingham Award, highest athletic honor at Har- vard. At the graduation exer- cises. he served as first class marshal, highest elective office an undergraduate can attain. SECOND HIGHEST Hockey captain his senior savas nseressnesqnegeesesrrinnonatoseonnnsor=svsihiati eta EAE eee mono SS _ "4 year, Kinasewich finished his varsity career as the 'school's second highest scorer with 110 points. Only Olympian Bob Cleary scored more. Now married to the former Janet Mittell, a Massachusetts girl, Kinasewich received magna cum laude honors on his HOCKEY ACE Is Harvard Grad--Edmonton-born hockey ace Gene Kinasewich has graduated from Harvard Uni- versity with honors after his enrolment four years ago caused a storm of controver- sy. At that time, critics ac- senior thesis in his social re-| cused Harvard of importing Jations major. He has studied| the Junior A hockey player adolescent psychology and with) for. his skill, claiming Kinase- 'all his other duties spent time 'in social work, helping children at a local settlement house. The dean's list student. says there will be no professional hockey in his future, though he has been thoroughly scouted. Kinasewich has been named one of four winners of a Henry Russell Shaw foreign travel fel- Jowship for nine months study overseas, Gene says he wants) to travel in eastern Europe and visit Communist countries. "Tf we can figure out a way for two to live as cheaply as one, I'll take my wife, too," Kinasewich says. Kinasewich was paid for play- ing junior hockey as a teen- lager, @ common practice in Ca- nada. He was the youngest player on the Edmonton Oil Kings at 17, His total pay was $1,122, He attended Deerfield Acad- emy in Massachusetts one year before enrolling at Harvard. As a Canadian Junior A graduate, Kinasewich was ineligible 94 bey player, He scored three hockey as a freshman. So he played baseball to maintain his athletic scholarship, DECISION REVERSED Just before his junior year, the Eastern College Athletic Conference eligibility commit- tee declared Kinasewich ineli- gible because of the pay he re- ceived in Canada. Later in the same season, the decision was reversed on the basis of a special exception. If he hadn't missed the half- season, Kinasewich would al- most certainly have established an all-time scoring record at Harvard. Kinasewich was an orphan at 10. One brother, Ray, plays rofessional hockey with Cleve- and of the American League. Another brother, Bob was on Cornell's unbeaten freshman squad last winter. When Harvard won the ECAC hockey tournament in 1963, "Ki- nasewich was named most val- wich was not a solid student, When he graduated, Gene be- came the first student frofn outside the U.S. to receive the William J. Bingham Award, Harvard's highest athletic honor and also received mag- na cum laude honors on his senior thesis in his social re- lations major. --(CP. Photo) College in the championship) game, including the winner in| sudden death overtime. | He also was most valuable) player in last winter's hockey) festival tournament at Boston/ Garden when the Crimson upset | both Minnesota and Toronto. He) scored three goals against Min-| nesota. | He became the second high-/ est scorer in Harvard history) with 110 points on 61 goals and 49 assists in 2% seasons of play. He had to sit out half of one season due to the eligibility question. He was not eligible to play at all in his junior year. During Kinasewich's varsity career, Harvard's hockey forces lost only 15 of 76 games. Tiger-Cats Picked | As Team To Beat | OTTAWA (CP) -- Officials of of the four goals against Boston all four clubs in the Eastern Football Conference agreed BIG WILT CHAMBERLAIN Tuesday that Hamilton Tiger-) Cats are the team to beat in| 1063. | Jim Trimble of Montreal Al-| FEATURED AT STARR'S THE FINEST ALL PURPOSE ig oO AT ' Look at This 1964 All-Star Line-Up @ SPRINGBOK ALUMINUM BOATS @ CUSTOM CRAFT FIBREGLAS @ MUNROE FIBREGLAS @ CHEROKEE ALUMINUM BOATS @ AQUA-SWAN ALUMINUM ~~ 185 ALL SIZES ... FOR EVERY PURPOSE MAY ATTEMPT FOOTBAI I ouettes was the only coach who = gp od club could e e defendi | NEW YORK (AP) -- Let's | on doing something about it. naneians. oe ag say you're a defensive half-| 'Wilt and I had quite a Managing director Jake G back. So how do you defend | talk," Stram said. "He's inter- | 4.47 of Ti-Cats said he expected| against a pass-receiver who | ested in football, genuinely in- |tis"Giub to repeat its first-place| is 7-foot-1, weighs 200 pounds | terested. finish of last season, but pre- "EASY BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE " also available and can outrun you? "T think it's a very interest- ing problem," said Hank Stram, coach of the American Football League's Kansas City Chiefs. And that's why he "Now I want to talk to some officials of San Francisco Warriors and see what we can work out about Wilt play- ing football with the Chiefs." San Francisco officials, wants to sign Wilt Chamber- lain, "T'm certain he would be the greatest flanker back in football," Stram said after Chamberlain took part in 'a recent workout at Monticello, N.Y., an upstate resort area. And Stram has some plans however, are expected to be less than completely enthus- iastic. Big Wilt makes in ex- dicted a tighter race. | The coaches formed a special) panel to discuss pro football at a benefit dinner for a boys') camp here. | cess of $50,000 a year playing pro basketball and the idea of such property being double- teamed by pro football line- mean wouldn't induce sweet dreams. National League } AB RH Pet! Williams, Chi. 243 45 89 '.366| Mays, San Fra. 24257 84 .347| Clemente, Pitts. 248 41. 83 .335| Torre, Mil. 232 37 75 .323| Bunning Kept Busy After No-Hit Game CHERRY HILL, N.J. (AP)--| The full significance of his his-) toric Father's Day feat hasn't dawned on Jim Bunning yet and the tall Philadelphia Phillies' pitcher prefers it that way. "J think it's good I don't re- alize it," said the bony, freckle- faced righthander. 'Getting up too high can hurt a fellow. It's a long way down." Bunging achieved a pitcher's utmost dream Sunday, turning in a perfect game against New York Mets in Philadelphia's 6-0 triumph. It was the first such regular- season performance in the Na- tional League in & years and the first in the majors since Charley Robertson of Chicago White Sox retired all 27 Detroit batters he faced in 1922. "{t's hard for me to- believe that," said Bunning Monday vat nis home in Cherry Hill. "I'm thrilled, of course, but it's not going to change' my way of liv- ing. You can bet on that. "T've been in this game too long to allow a thing like this to go to my head," added the 92-year-old Kentuckian, an even- tempered man who has been playing profession al baseball since 1950, the last 10 years in the major leagues. HAD NO-HITTER IN 1958 i This was the second no-hitter Bunning's ms league career. e hurled his first as a mem- fer of Detroit Tigers against Boston Red Sox in 1958. Two bases on bails and a hit batter marred his bid for a_ perfect game, "My first no-hitter caused a bit of excitement,' Bunning re- called, "but not anything like this." "The telephone has not stopped ringing since early this morning. And I've talked to more reporters and posed for niore photographers than I have in all the other days combined." Bunning, a father of seven, had the added pleasure of hav- Hunt, New York 231 30 74 .320 Runs--Mays, 57. | Runs Batted In--Mays, 53. | Hits--Williams, 89. Doubles -- Williams and Cle-| mente, 18, | Triples--Santo, Chicago and Callison, Philadelphia, 6. HS Home Runs--Mays, 22. | Stolen Bases--Wills, Los An-| geles,-23; ie Pitching -- Farrell, Houston,'/-- 10-1, .909. | Strikeouts--Koufax, Los An-| geles, 106. | American League i _ ABR H Pet. Oliva, Minnesota 273 48 93 .341 Fregosi, Los Ang 174 32 57 .328 Robinson, Balt. 242 36 79 326% Hinton, Wash. 267 38 86 .322) Mantle, N. York 164 31 53 .322/ Runs--Allison, Minnesota, 49. ing his wife, Mary, and oldest child, Barbara, 12, watch his masterpiece in person at Shea Stadium. The rest of the brood saw it on television, "T arrived home at 12:15 Mon- day morning and went right to bed," said Jim "I was tired. "Then some idiot of a news- paper man--pardon the expres. sion--called at seven in the morning wanting to come out with a photographer for a story and pictures. I didn't mind his waking me so much, but he woke up all the kids." PHONE KEEPS RINGING "The phone hasn't stopped ringing since." Bunning's achievement has al- ready paid off financially. He received $1,000 for appearing on Ed Sullivan's television show Sunday night. Frank Scott, major league players' agent, estimated Bunn- ing might earn as much as $25,- 000 by the end of the year, aside from his salary, estimated at around $30,000. Runs Batted In--Stuart, Bos. on, 55. Hits--Oliva, 93. f | Doubles -- Bressoud, Boston| and Hinton, 18. ees) Triples -- Yastrzerhski, Bos- ton, and Versalles, Minnesota, t Home Runs--Killebrew, Min- nesota, 23. Stolen Bases--Aparicio, Baltf: more, 31. Pitching -- Ford, New York, -1, 909. Strikeouts--Ford, 92. MEETING CANCELLED MIAMI BEACH, Fla, (AP)-- Beach Feb. 25, had declined to) attend, TEE NEE TRAILERS THE TOP TEN gprennrney OTT? Eee 1 Ee Y i : -- . a A Merc Will Take You Where The Big Fish Hide Because Mercury features "Jet-Prop'" Exhaust that buries the sound and improves the breathing; one piece, no snag, no draw lower unity for safer cruising, improves safety and performance. Come in and see them all , . . from the new 3.9 Merc to the power- ful Merc 1000 with 100 h.p. SPECIAL NOTICE .. . Due to popular demand only a limited supply of 35 h.p, Mercs left... first come -- first.served -- while they last. "EASY BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE" Shop STARR'S First for The Biggest Bargains! FOR DEPENDABILITY . . , FOR TOP PERFORMANCE Your Choice from 3.9 to 100 Pp. AND UP See Our Top Selection of Boats and Motors OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY TILL 9 P.M, DURING SUMMER The World Boxing Association cancelled Sunday a hearing on the application of former world heavyweight champion Sonny Liston for reinstatement to the! | WBA ring ratings. President Ed| Lassman said the hearing| scheduled for June 27-28 at Washington, D.C. was called off because Cassius Clay, who won) / the title from Liston at Miami| FURNITURE & APPLIANCES 491 RITSON RD. S.° 723-3433 CONVENIENT TERMS -- AMPLE PARKING »

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