Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Sep 1964, p. 12

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4 he a STs Be Map ON ey OSG Gere og WP 3 'a : PLL EP GOV EOE MOS FELL iv nding a i hts ste a Ratan le th Me en Ra os » in Lake Superior Provincial Park at Lakes Peller, Old Woman, Red Rock, Gamita- gama, Crescent. Pickerel good at lakes Tunnel and Redrock. ther. Good catches of large ville Lake. | Port Arthur -- Pickerel erally good. Bass and trout fair. Lake trout poor. WEERLY REPORT © 42 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, September 4, 1964 | _ Ex-College Star _ Finds Difference In Pro Football ED BLACKMAN (CP) -- It didn't take Al Irwin long to discover that professional football is dis- tinctly different from the col- z. ference, on ' the end of a fist that hit him squarely in the mouth. * "TY realized then that the pros * play a much rougher game," he says in recollective understate. ment. "They have more sly tactics and use their. elbows * and fists a lot more." ; Irwin's inhospitable introduc- =- tion to the sly, if unsubtle, tac- ties occurred in a preseason ex- hibition game against Saskatch- * ewan Roughriders, At offensive 'end, he was playing against) Roughrider Garner Ekstrand. "I was 'blocking him and maybe holding him a little," Irwin recalls. '"'He kept getting more and more angry and fi- nally he punched me right in the mouth. He really tagged have no reason to regret draft-| me because I was bleeding pretty good." HIDE, FEAR "But you can't let 'those things scare you because minute you become intimidated you are wasting your time on the football field," Irwin says. Irwin is not really the 'right size to be intimidated, standing six - foot - four and carrying 220 pound on surprisingly fast feet. At high school in Toronto, where he grew up, Irwin once ran 100 yards in 10.1 seconds. At that time, competing on the school track team, football held little interest for this his- ory major from Hamilton's McMaster University. Only when he reached grade 12 did he play his first organized foot- ball game and he never seri- ously considered turning profes- sional until the end of his three- year tour as an end for Mc- Master. The Als, who jumped into 'an early lead in eastern football, ing the 21-year-old college end. Coach Jim Trimble is counting youngster to help supply the the| pass-catching ability his tea has lacked. SCORES TOUCHDOWN In the first regular season game against Hamilton, Irwin hauled down two passes, one for a touchdown, as Alouettes trounced the Tiger-Cats 33-5, In the second game, defeating Toronto Argonauts 21-13, the Montreal attack was confined mainly to the ground as quar- terback Vernon Cole was suffer- ing with a sore shoulder. Irwin was busy throwing blocks for, end run by halfback George Dixon. particularly surprised that he made the starting lineup and had such an auspicious start. "I love to compete, to play any game, and I try to do the best I can." plans for the future into con- fusion, although one item on the agenda is definite: He'll marry lat Christmas a Toronto girl he on the bespectacled mo, Rookie Irwin says he was not} Pro football has thrown his), Cool Spell Improves Fishing Conditions TORONTO (CP) -- Cool wea- ~|ther in the province this week tended to improve fishing con- ditions, especially for bass and pickerel. The department of lands and forests, in its weekly report on fishing conditions, sand anglers generally were having good luck with bass and pickerel. Lake trout and speckled trout were reluctant to go for bait or lure. This week's report, as of Wed- nesday, covered 20 of the de- partment's 22 districts: The reports: EAST ~ Kemptville -- Fair on Ottawa and St. e rivers and lakes in Leeds County. Most species improving with cooler weather. Tweed -- Lake trout gener- erel good in Golden Lake and Ottawa River above Deep River. Chapleau -- Generally fair for all species. Pickerel good in Missinabi area. Speckled trout 'excellent in Shawmere and Ne- megosenda rivers. Cochrane -- Good catches of speckled and lake trout. Excel- lent run of speckled trout in Sutton River. Geraldton -- Pickereland northern pike good to excellent in O'Sullivan Lake, Twin Lakes, trout fair. Lake trout poor. | Gogama -- Generally fair to| good for all species. Kapuskasing -- Pickerel and northern pike good throughout district, best in lakes Sushimi, Shannon, Kabinagagami, Naga- ally fair; Palmerston Lake con- sistently good. Speckled trout fair, Pickerel. good. Bass good, Exceptional in Mississagagon Lake. CENTRAL Lindsay -- Pickerel, bass and muskellunge poor to fair in Rice Lake, fair to good in Stoney Lake. Generally fair in Halibur- ton area. WEST in St. Clair River and southern Lake Huron, Smallmouth bass good in St. Clair River. Lake Huron -- Speckled and Lake Erfe -- White bass good ' igamisis, Nagagami and Remi. Speckled trout poor because of heavy rainfall. North Bay -- Pickerel and pike good in lakes Cedar and Wickstead. Lake trout poor. 4 wewew weer Ss | Rosemary. \)} TWO EXPERT STYLISTS Rosemary Veenhot Judy Nesh @ TINTING Wild Goose Lake. Speckled|, Speckled trout good to excellent in Mattawa area, Antoine Creek and Long Lake. Pickerel, bass and muskellunge fair in Lake Nipissing. Angling in Timagami area fair to poor, atte Leee Beem coe len' areas. Some large pickerel and pike taken in Whitestone Lake. Sudbury -- Good for all spe- cies. Swastika -- Pickerel and northern pike generally good to excellent. Speckled trout: im- proving. Prize fish of week a 23-pound northern pike from Ward Lake and 20-pound north- ern pike from Winnie Lake. White River -- Pickerel go at White and Flood lakes, bs saga nag lake trout gener- ly poor air. NORTHWEST are a og | "ae good for - species. -- good at Main e. Youngest Swimmer To Cross Channel DOVER, England (CP) -- Leonora Modell, 14, of Sacra: mento, Calif., Thursday night became the .youngest person to swim the English Chancel, 22 miles from| . St. James, Man., had been the previous youngest ha swum the Channel in July, 1963, when she was 17 years four Kenora -- Generally slow for Sault Ste. Marie -- Trout good all species because of cold wea- months, ~ Two Ocean Trips For brown trout generally fair.|}\@ PERMING European Teams Killed | Canada's Olympic Bid By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor When Canada's bid to stage the 1968 Winter Olympic Games| was defeated at a closed meet- ing of the International Olympic Committee at Innsbruck, Aus- tria, last January, some people put the rap--off the record--on Sidney Dawes. They felt. this} Montreal industrialist, Canada's} IOC member since 1947, prob- ably hadn't lobbied vigorously enough. But, possibly, Canada wasn't destined to get the Games. It was only a 50-50 chance and Grenoble, France, won out by a two-vote margin over Banff- Lake Louise. Some Canadians overlooked the fact that this country's chances received a serious set- back a few months earlier when the unpredictable IOC awarded Mexico City the 1968 Summer Olympics over heavily favored France and the U.S. |why Banff should not' carry| Canada's bid. | The B.C. folks charged that the COA was discriminating {against them and just last} |week Dawes said the choice of |Canada's site should "be kept) 'open to the last minute" and) jadded: "Garibaldi Park is a |fantastic place and I would think it would certainly be as good as the Banff-Lake Louise} location." He said that to dis-| count Garibaldi now would) hamper its development. | This, of course, should make} for a lively meeting at Mont- real Dawes wants the decision de-| ferred until possibly 1967. The Banff - Lake Louise sponsors refer an immediate decision. President Jim Worrall of the COA points out that the COA has the final say and that if its board of directors decides a de- cision should be deferred, "then that also is its responsibility." {started dating in grade 12. "I'm still trying to work out the other problems, I want to be a high school eacher in his- tory and I'd like to get my master's degree at McGill, I might have to do it in haif- jyears -- that's if I don't Bet | traded or cut." Black bass good in Grand/) River, Nith Piver, Lake Huron, | Warner Bay, Hay Bay. Pickerel good to excellent in Chesley|} Lake, poor to fair at Puslinch.|) NORTH | @ STYLING @ CUTTING 1188 Simcoe St, 5. (et Ritson Rd.) gonquin Park -- Lake trout Al and ' bass generally good. Pick-| NEW PHONE 723-6711 Large Selection Freshly Dug FROM But Dawes has been a power- /ful influence in Olympic mat- ters for years and he'll cer- |tainly go for a deferment. Don't 'on he'll lose his point. FOOTBALL STANDINGS THE CANADIAN PRESS Western Conference WLT F APt 401 97 369 4 2 0126 818 33 0139 99 6 1139 166 3) 0 36 184 0) Up to this point, Canada's chances of getting the Games were about 85 to 15. The odds against Banff tum- bled for one reason: European countries would be faced with the problem of raising huge sums to send teams on two long hauls in one year to North America--Mexico in the sum- mer, Banff a few months later.) Two - thirds of the competing] By countries in Winter Olympics! are European and it is likely they swung the vote to France.|B.C. The balloting is secret and no|Calgary one on the outside can say for|Sask. sure just what happened. | Winnipeg But immediately the vote was|Edmonton -- the Calgary) ympic Development Associa- tion officials who sponsored the| SPORTS BRIEFS Banff-Lake Louise bid declared PLAYER DIES | BOSTON (AP) -- John Mc- they would be in the running for the 1972 Games, Dawes commented: "Why flog a dead|Court, 17. St. John's prep foot-| horse" ball player from Waterford, | This didn't win Canada's 10C\Conn., died Thursday in hospi-| 3 000 000 member any friends, but then tal as a result of a heat stroke. | OVER ' 1 he has never gone out to win|McCourt was stricken by heat! SATISFIED CUSTOMERS AT KING OPTICAL! EVERGREENS -50 FREE PLANNING! Package Deals Available PLENTY of FREE PARKING = ae CONVENIENT TERMS ARRANGED ON LARGE ORDERS OPEN 8 A.M. 'til DARK All Our Planting GUARANTEED One Full Year Oshawa Garden Service 1259 Stmcoe St. North PHONE 723-1161 pte a 15 04 IT'S THE HAPPY COMBINATION THAT SUITS EVERY TASTE! eas a popularity contest. prostration during the school's | first t CONSIDER SITE first football practice of the s season. Things were quiet until a month or so ago when it was DYE OUT learned that the COA would) EDMONTON (CP -- Co-cap- meet Sept. 12 to endorse Can-|tain Nat Dye, a six-year vet- ada's site for the 1972 event. 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