Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Oct 1964, p. 12

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, is "ait a, Two-goal performances alsojLaurent, Doug Dunnville ana came from Mike Corrigan and| Brit Selby got the other Marl- boro goals. Barry Watson of Toronto, as the Pete Loveless ecoted® buiue Leafs scored siy goals in the| for Hamilton, with Jim Young last period to overcome a 3-2\and Real Lemieux getting one Hamilton lead. Neil Clark, Paul/ each. JQ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, October 23, 1964 SPORTS MENU y Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "Everything From Soup To Nuts' i cntliaaiestneieateianienienatetieds rd BOSTON BRUINS finally collected their first point in the - National Hockey League race, last night at home, when they tied Toronto Maple Leafs 2-2. On the strength of Bruins' play in the first half-or-better, of the game, they deserved to win. Reg Fleming potted a couple of tallies past goalie John- ny Bower and with just a little, teeny bit of margin, he might have had three or even four. We watched the game at Al Hartshorn's emporium, the Regent Theatre, via '"Eidophor" and the showing was excellent, The wide screen and close- "yp action gives a view of the game, equivalent to sitting in the front row -- while using binoculars. Before Bob Pulford finally tied up the game in the third period, the puck had . - been out-of-sight and partially smothered, for a matter of * several seconds. Many fans thought so and certainly, Bos- "ton coach Milt Schmidt thought so. If Clarence Campbell 'was watching -- he didn't need to be a graduate of the Belleville School for the Deaf to be able to lip-read what the 'close-up camera disclosed -- when Miltie screamed at the Teferee. He was referring to some type of canine origin, we think. Later on when goalie Johnston drew a penalty for cuffing a Toronto player who was cruising either in or very . lose to the goalie's sacred territory (inside the crease) -- we thought we caught Coach Schmidt commenting upon the official's birth status. For sure ~ when canny Johnny Bower, late in the third period, came right out into the face-off cir- cle to handle a puck -- then put on a great act of pretending he couldn't get rid of it -- (there's a penalty for holding the puck) -- everybody, watching, caught the goalie's sly wink to one of his teammates, after he had got away with the stratagem. This '"'Eidophor" technique puts the viewer right on top of the play at all times and for the ardent hockey ifan, provides an even better alternate than TV, so it's got to be a top attraction for those games that can not be viewed by any other means than actually being right there. , x x x x TORONTO LEAFS moved up into a tie for first place in the NHL standings last night, with their tie in Boston and while this was going, their Junior team, the Marlboros, were moving up into a tie for first place in the OHA Junior at. ae standings. The Marlies trailed Hamilton Red Wings 3-2 going into the third period in Hamilton last night and scored six goals in the third period to win the game 84. The win put the Marlboros up tied for first place, because while this was going on, Peterborough Juniors were whipping Niagara Falls 6-1, in the Liftlock City. It's taken a little while but now it begins to look as if the Junior "Petes" are on the move. Before the schedule opened, they were picked in several corners to be the class of the Junior "A" league this season and up until last night, they hadn't won a game. But knocking off the league-leaders and by a 6-1 score, should be proof enough that they've quit fooling. They'll bé mighty tough from here to the end of the schedule. Now if Oshawa Generals can cop a win on Sunday afternoon, when they play Marlies,.in Maple Leaf Gardens, they'll likely be in second place all alone. At the moment, the Generals have the only undefeated record in the Junior "A" circuit. x x x x ' WHITBY DUNOPS open their OHA Metro Junior "B" League schedule tomorrow night, on their home ice, with the Neil McNeill Maroons as the visitors. In the past two weeks, the Junior "'Dunnies'"' have enjoyed a very creditable record in a series of pre-season exhibition games. In a home-and- home set with the Maroons, each team won on the other guy's ice -- so tomorrow night's schedule opener should be a red-hot bit of hockey action. U.S. SWIMMING STARS DOMINATE MEDAL HONORS Peterborough Jrs. Upset N. Falls, Ist Win -- lst Loss | THE CANADIAN PRESS {place with only one tie in three iagara Falls took its first Fly- loss and Peterborough its first win Thursday night, and the re-|tied two in their previous con- sult shook up both the top and| tests. Now the Petes share fifth middle rungs of the gg place with Montreal. Hockey Association's Junior SCORE TWO EACH Dale Watson and Andre La- Tees 'versa well nt e Petes play we ani consistently to dump the Fly- -- bag a pair of goa ers G1. Niagara Falls, prev-|S0¢tumell and. Jone Vanden iously alone atop the league,| sing one each, with Brian Brad. ley counting the Niagara Falls ropped into a first-place tie goal in the second period. "= SPORTS CALENDAR tory, 8-4, over last-place Ham- ilton Red Wings in the only TODAY'S GAMES FOOTBALL other league action. Oshawa COSSA Leagues -- What's OwN got that the other } whiskies haven't got - EXTRA SMOOTHNESS Because it's Extra Charcoal Filtered - ee et oY The Flyers, get another chance when they meet St. (Junior League) -- O'Neill CVI vs Donevan CI, at 4.30 p.m.; Catharines in the only game to- night. Peterborough was in last (Senior League) -- McLaughlin CVI vs Central CI, at rye HOCKEY SCORES STANDINGS alten sate e By THE CANADIAN PRESS one comes along. The action W oar men Civic Memorial Stadium. New York SATURDAY'S GAMES Boston HOCKEY took place in the first period of last night's NHL game in Boston, which ended in a 2-2 tie. Thursday's Result OHA. Metro Junior "B" Toronto 2 Boston 2 League -- Neil McNeill- Maroons (Only game scheduled) vs Whitby Duniops, at Whitby Games Saturday Arena, 7.00 p.m. Detroit at Montreal New York at Toronto (Only games scheduled) Games Sunday Chicago at New York Detroit at Boston control of the puck and Eddie Shack (23), shown at the ex- treme right, moved in to pro- tect his goalie. That's Gary Dornhoefer (8) of the Bruins, lurking near the far goal-post, to help out with a rebound, if JUST CLOSE! -- Boston Bruins' Bob McCord (4) ap- pears to have Toronto Leafs' goalie, Johnny Bower, almost at his mercy, in this shot ~ but the shot never came, be- cause McCord failed to gain Reg Fleming Scores Both Bostons Goals ex With Team Penalized ex... 775443 42027 28 By THE CANADIAN PRESS while ticking off 140 minutes nla a fair indication of the| Oshawa Toronto Montreal Chicago Detroit --(AP Wirephoto) Charcoal Filtering is a slow, costly process but it produces a perfectly 'polished? whisky, smooth as velvet. This extr émoothness in Brown Jug is the reason Oshawa pb | Club 1 why 90 many people who know whisky prefer Brown Jug, Skin and Scuba Classes For Men & Women AT THE BOYS' CLUB For informetion ALEX MacDONALD 725-9704 BILL MITCHELL 623-7285 Gooderham's have been distilling fine whiskies since 1838 3 1 2 18 188 03 16 127 ' : peas ; Fr | St. Cath'ines Boston's vew of the National| penalties, kept the loyal Bruin|state of Bruin preparedness. (po ior ch Hockey League from its accus-|fans hopes alive for a period) The tie enabled: Toronto tolinontroal® tomed last place appears to be|and a half. move into a first-place tie with| Kitchener so upside-down that Bruin pen-| 'His first marker came as-|Montreal, both teams having) Hamilton aities are needed to enable the sisted by Forbes Kennedy while|identical records of two wins,| Thursday's Results team to count points. jteammate Leo Boivin was sit-|/two ties and no losses. lroronto 8 Hamilton 4 Both Bruin goals in Thursday | ting out a penalty at 12:25 of} Montreal announced Thurs-| Niagara Falls 1 Peterborough 6 night's 2-2 tie with Toronto in| the first period. day they have lost defenceman | Friday's Game Boston were scored by penalty; Good things repeated at 9:38/Terry Harper for an indefinite | o Gatnaringe ot Niagara Falls killer Reg Fleming while his | of the second when he caught|period because of a chip frac-| ~~ team was shorthanded. Boston|the Toronto defence off guard|ture in one of lumbar vertebrae | received only three penalties |and scored unassisted. suffered in Wednesday night's and the question that might be) game when le was checked prerererer Your Satisfaction Is Our Aim All Cars Carry Our GUARANTEE KELLY DISNEY USED CARS Ltd. 1200 Dundas E. Whitby 668-5891 BUDGET TERMS DROP IN te + a two-goal lead 0° Toronto in the middle of the Tulns; Diew a two-goal ieac second period and Bobby Pul- LAST NIGHT'S wall performance by goalie Ed- ' die Jeaneon preserved a tie | tack in the third period. His STARS | Fleming, traded by Chicago|ing on the ice. killer who scored two goals, one ljafter his last season perform-| Johnston was called on tojof them unassisted, in Thursday land their defences were s0| and Boston's first point in NHL|g0al was the third of a series of | jance in which he scored only make 33 stops to 17 by Maple|night's 2-2 tie between the "ae asked is whether they would|SPARKLED IN NETS along the boards by centre Fred| have done any better with more; Andy Bathgate scored first|Stanfield of Chicago. | weak that only a backs-to-the|ford evened the score during a ; | powerful, 18-shot Maple Leaf at- action after consecutive defeats|shots at Johnston who made| By THE CANADIAN PRESS in their first four outings. two outstanding saves while ly-| Reg Fleming, Boston penalty ithree goals and six assists|Leaf goalie Johnny Bower, con-|ins and Toronto Maple Leafs. » swept Canada back By JIM BECKER TOKYO (AP)--Don Schol- lander and Sharon Stouder make quite a swimming team all by themselves. They won seven gold med- als and one silver between them in the Tokyo Olympics, and each wound up by swim- ming on a winning relay team in the windup Sunday night. Schollander, the greatest thing to hit swim-mad Japan since instant rice, says he's worried that he won't be hun- gry any more. Schollandern 18, from Lake Oswego, Ore., is the first man to win four gold medals in Olympic swimming. He took the 100- and 400-metre free- style and swam legs on the winning 400-metre medley and 800-metre freestyle relays, Don's 200 in the 800 relay was the fastest ever swum-- he holds the world record-- but can't count because it came on the anchor leg. Over on the girls' team, Sharon, a 15-year-old blonde with close-chopped hair, was only edged out of four gold medals by Australia's fabu- lous Dawn Fraser, who beat Sharon by a couple of feet in the 100-metre freestyle. Sharon got the silver medal there and won the 100-metre butterfly, plus two legs on the winning 400-metre, freestyle ad and the 400-metre med- ley. After the last race, she joined her teammates for a mass interview. "Why, they're just chil- dren," a reporter said, al- though the girls average nearly 17 years. The four-backs roker Cathy Ferguson, breast- stroker Cindy Goyette, Sharon and Kathy Ellis in the free- style--look young for their ages. And so much alike the best way to tell them apart would be to throw them in the water and see which stroke they swim. Sharon is a high school girl in Glendora, Calif. Schollander will enter Yale when he gets home That's if the Japanese ever let him go. His mother and father said before the race that they had shipped off to a Japanese orphanage some 80 boxes of gifts Don had re- ceived from fans in Japan. "There wi dolls, paper cranes--good' luck symbols-- and other wonderful things," said Schollander's mother, a former swimmer herself. In fact, Don's mother was a swimmer in a show with Johnny Weismuller, the American who won three gold medals and was perhaps the last to dominate the swim portion of the games before n Don knew Weismuller as a toddler although he couldn't say his name, He called him "J Marshmellow." om JIM DAY - Young Canadian Rider Moves Back Into Lead HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -- Jim Day, riding The Comet, into the lead Thursday night in inter- national jumping competition at the Pennsylvania National horse show. The 18-year-old . Day, from Toronto, also reclaimed the in- dividual lead that 19-year-old Neil Shapiro had taken Thurs- day afternoon. In a tremendous display of} Jim ship, Shapiro gave sportsman: back the blue and gold sash em- though blematic of the individual lead even before Monday night's event ended. Day and The Comet rode two perfect rounds in the interna-| tional "doubles - and - trebles" | event, winning in @ jump-olf with the blazing time of 33.9 seconds, Shapiro, riding Jacksorbetter for the fourth straight time, ran into trouble in the first round, knocking down the last: fence of a difficult in-and-out hurdle. The crowd roared its appro- val as the luckless Brazilians posted their first score of the week-long show--a third-place ribbon behind Dr. Gianni Franco Samaja, aboard Mr. For a moment it appeared as q Rafael Jimenez, riding Gaylord, who give Mexico its first blue ribbon, but Day's time was 1.3 seconds faster. Jimenez had to settle for second place. Pot 'eo 21, of North ranch, N.J., wound fourth on San Pedro. = MAKE ROOM For ME! What does your growing family need * AN ADDITION TO YOUR PRESENT HOME * A NEW HOME with all conveniences | WHATEVER YOUR NEEDS You can count on Oshawa QUALITY BUILD you will need FREE ESTIMATES e OSHAWA WOOD PRODUCTS COURTICE 728-1611 LIMITED 728-1617 Wood Products forall the ING MATERIALS FREE PLANNING ADVICE OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE SATURDAY! $50,000 added CANADIAN CHAMPIONSHIP Top international thoroughbreds and jockeys compete in is climax of Woodbine's racing season. POST TIME2P.M, OODBINE GREENWOOD OPENS MONDAY

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