Spotlighting THE GENERALS By WREN BLAIR Manager of Generals The Oshawa Generals, hold- ing a 2-win 1-loss record in the New Year, move into Kitchener tonight for an important tussle |. with the New York Farm Club, ' There is le rest for the "ee Generals as they return ome tomorrow night for a rugged test against the fast- moving Montreal Junior Cana- diens, The Canadiens have yet to be defeated since Christmas and have taken dead aim on the Generals' fourth place standing. Injuries which have plagued the Motor City Club since early season show no sign of letting up. The other day we purchased defenceman Martin Buchar from Niagara Falls, and he played in only one contest (the Generals' 5-4 win in Peterborough Sunday) and in that game suffered a bad hand injury which caused him to miss almost all of Tues- day's game here against Niagara Falls.' Bob Kilger. is out of action with a badly swollen ankle, and of course |victory. the popular rightwinger out of action for the remainder the game, This meant that in that sin- gular attrac. tion the Gener- als operating without Buchar, O'Shea, Kilger, and Cashman, still battled to overcome an early Niagara Falls lead and had reversed the score mid- way through the final stanza. However ,injuries took their toll and the ten or eleven boys who were trying to carry the load just ran out of steam as the Flyers came on for a 7-5 Some relief appears to be in sight since it is expected that Team Captain Danny O'Shea will return to the lineup any day now while it is hoped that Cashman will be ready to play DOREEN RYAN victony in a record - career remains one of the fond- est memories for Doreen Ryan, premier Canadian ; iday after a -- of active competitio three, said: speedskater gave me many thrills and enabled me to see) tj the world. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, Januery 8, 1965 7 * Canada Speedskater -MadeOlympics Twice Canadian women's ing record NOW INSTRUCTOR EDMONTON (CP)--Her first pack who retired Thurs- "century Mrs, Ryan, 33, re 'mother of "T have no regrets, Being a U.S. Wrangle tive director of tional Colidgiate Athletic Asso- Still Goes On CHICAGO (AP)--The execu: the U.S. Na- edj ously until 1947. At that time I on ee re Foe are ee "IT realy didn't skate seri- won my first Canadian title in the junior girls' mass start, gest thrills." In the years since she 'twice has represented Canada at the Olympic games, in 1960 and again last year, and held 11 Canadian championships in in- termediate and senior competi- ion, In 1952 she shared the North American crown and at one point in her career held every BASKETBALL SCORES Currently she holds o " e . M Ryan set interna- tional records for Canada if the 500, 1,500 and 3,000-metre distances at a meet in -- Switzerland. marks for the 1,000 metres, ne be] Bred tot Pati 3 a e half, three-qua one-mile and two-mile events, Squaw Valley, ep 9 1960. By THE CANADIAN PRESS WBA ciation (NCAA) minimized She placed 10th in th THEY'VE PROVED IT AGAIN -- SWEEPING REALLY HELPS the game of curling, was held. rock just released by the auto- The experiment was an inter- Ron. Anton (right), Bob Es- matic machine at the left, esting highlight of the second dale (centre) and Wally Ursu- The rocks that were swept annual "Tournament of Cham- liak, all of the Alberta rink, travelled further along the ice' pions" currently being held in sweep the ice in front of a than those that went unaided. Toronto. --(CP Wirephoto) tonight in Kitchener. The status of Kilger and Buchar is still in doubt. If the Generals could get everyone healthy at once, game against Niagara, hard- |their prospective club could rock defenceman Gilles |look conceivably different than Marotte crashed Wayne Cash- jit has at any time this season, Thursday the importance of an- nounced backing by the Inter- national Amateur Athletic Fed- eration of the U.S, Amateur Athletic Union, Walter Byers said the inter- event last year at =H Austria. Detroit 105 Baltimore 110 Boston 112 Los Angeles 104 Danny O'Shea is still out with , torn ligaments in. his knee. Very early in Tuesday's It's been proven before, but yesterday at Toronto Maple Leaf Gardens, an experiment designed to determine the value of sweeping stones in Annoying Injuries Three reasonably capable lines could be formed with Danny O'Shea centring Wayne Cashman and Chris Hayes, 'Ron Buchanan between Billy Little and Bob Marshall, and Billy White between Bill Ban- nerman and Jimmy Booth. This would also leave six men available for defence in the persons of Bobby Orr, Chris Roberts, . Nick Beverley, Bob Kilger, Armand Giroux and Martin Buchar. Both Buchar and Kilger can also play for- ward and this would then give the Generals some depth that they have not had all season as aresult of the annoying injuries. It is amazing that the play of Ron Buchanan and Bobby Orr stays at such a high level with the amount of ice time these two boys have to log up as a result of the decreased lineup. Orr is probably a little ahead of his record-setting goal pace Cut Depth of last season scoring his 19th and 20th goals here on Tues- day night. Buchanan who miss- ed several games because of a shoulder dislocation, and who still plays every game, with a specially built harness scored his 26th goal on Tuesday, and is half way to the number he got last year when he scored 52, The Generals face an extreme- ly stern test here) tomorrow night because Junior Canadiens are without doubt the fastest skating teafn in the circuit who have finally hit their stride. Always the most popular team amongst spectators, Scotty Bowman's crew boasts some of |t the hottest snipers in the league of late, An interesting note on the Montreal roster is player wearing sweater No. 20, Craig Patrick, who is the son of Lynn Patrick, the Bruins General Manager, who is play- TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS Cameron's PEI Rink Ousts Brier Champs By IAN MacLAINE TORONTO Doug Cameron's own knocking the jardson while Lerner and Cam- (CP) -- Missing\eron clash. The winners play from the Tournament of Cham-|tonight for first-place spoils of pions as the bonspiel hits the) $5,000 in merchandise. playoff stage today is the big-| gest champion of them all. Charlotte- foursome 'edged. Lyall Dagg's Vancouver rink 7-6 in a pressure-packed seventh round Thursday night, 1964 world and Canadian title- holders out of the round-robin competition. It was a must situation for The runners-up share $2,500 in prizes while the two teams ousted in' the semi-final round meet to decide third- and fourth places for. $1,000 and $600 re- spectively in prizes. Gervais whipped Magie's win- less rink 14-3 in other seventh- round action, Richardson won 11-5 over Ash's Northern On- tario entry and Lerner downed Rugged Centre Coming Into Own The most improved player on the Generals' roster in the past few games has certainly been centreman Billy White. Billy is a big rugged boy from New Liskeard, Ontario, who has two years of Junior H left after this season. Of lai be has started to come into his the puck mined skating, and is mixing it up where necessary, and notched his fifth and sixth goals in the last two games. Playing juvenile last year in his hometown, Billy led his -- in both points scored in penalties, and has always\been a top prospect in the Bruins' organization since he was signed two years ago. He spent all of the 1962-63 sea- son with the Generals when they played in the Metro Jun- by carrying sere: by much more deter- {tion an aura of determina- ing his hockey in Montreal while also attending school there. ior "A" league, but returned home last year to gain a bit more confidence in the goal |both entries. A loss to Dagg iwould have dropped Cameron from the playoff round, Al- though he and Dagg would have boasted identical records, the British Columbia rink enjoyed a better points-for-and-against average. . | Alberta's Hec Gervais and Hersh Lerner of Winnipeg fin- Roberts 10-4. In the afternoon round, Ler- ner edged Cameron 12-10 in a 12-end match, Roberts ¢ropped a 10-3 decision to Dagg, Gervais took Ash 9-5 and Richardson won 12-4 over Magie. Dagg highlighted morning ac- tion with a 25-1 win over Magie, Gervais walloped Cameron 12-2, y jer and much more will un- Mdoubtedly be heard from this boy throughout the balance of |ord. Emie Richardson of Regina and Cameron finished with 5-2 records but the Saskatchewan rink took third place on its bet- ter points average. Dagg finished fifth with 3-4, Murray Roberts' Unionville, tion doing of late, and he is going scoring department. It appears that Billy has finally come into his own as a Junior "A" play- this season because you can about everything he is to be a big asset to this club as the Generals continue their battle to grab a playoff spot in this hard-fought race. Follow- ished the tournament with 6-1 records but Gervais's Edmon- ton quartet was given top place because of its better points rec- Richardson edged Roberts 8-7 and Lerner trounced Ash 11-4. Veteran tournament observers couldn't recall when such a score as the Dagg-Magie match had been registered, in either Canadian championship play or international games. Dagg admitted after the game he wasn't particularly happy about the outcome but since points might have meant the difference in his rink reaching ing tomorrow night's home attraction, which begins at 7.15 with Junior Canadiens, Generals have the weekend off and return home here next Tuesday night for an eight o'clock attraction with Kitch- ener. the SPORTS IN BRIEF SALES SLOW MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Mil- waukee Braves have received orders for 36 season tickets so|P0 far for their 1965 lame duck season in Milwaukee, Ralph Delforge, the club's secretary, said Thursday. A year ago, Ont., rink sixth with 2-5, the 1064 Canadian high school rink from Kirkland Lake, skipped by Bob Ash, was seventh at 1-6, and Bob Magie's United States championship rink from Duluth, Minn., trailed with an 0-7 rec- ord. In afternoon semi-final play Gervais meets thiré-place Rich- the playoffs, he was prepared to see the score mount. In his evening game with Cameron, Dagg's foursome held the Prince Edward Island rink off the scoreboard in all but two ends. But Cameron's counts were big--four in the fifth and three | STAMPS SIGN STAR FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. Fred Marshall, six-foot, pound quarterback who led ved kansas to an 11-0 season, signed) a contract Thursday with Cal- gary Stampeders of the Cana- dian Football League. Marshall, uy He OHA Sr. All-Stars Surprise Czechs LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Twenty Ontario seniors dispersed today Hornets scored an insurance goal with less than four minutes in the seventh. Dagg could: only muster two in the first and sin- gle counts im the sixth, eighth, ninth and 10th, The rinks blanked the second, third and fourth ends. Aside from the Dagg-Cameron tussle, most of the interest cen- tred on the Northern Ontario- Saskatchewan tilt where Ash's teen-age rink continued'to draw plaudits for its efforts--particu- larly against the four - time world and Canadian champion Richardson rink. The Richardson entry was pressed in the early ends but managed to count four in the seventh and added three in the eighth to' put the contest out of the high school ¢lub's reach. Cameron entered Thursday's play with a four-game 'winning streak. But once-defeated Al- a 12-1 win in a game that was elosely contested until the eighth end when Gervais came through with a three-ender. Cameron had to gamble from that point on and missed the big ones as Gervais added a single in the' ninth and finished up with five more in the 10th when both Cameron's stones went through the house in his efforts to draw to the button. In another tight tussle during the moming, Ontario's entry was virtually eliminated from Harry Gilmer Lions' Coach DETROIT (AP)--Harry Gil- mer, former Detroit Lions quar- terback. and Minnesota Vikings named of the National Football League's Lions Thurs- day. He succeeds George Wil- assistant coach, head. coach was son, who quit recently. Owner William Clay Ford of the Lions said Gilmer had ac- cepted a three-year contract. Terms were not disclosed. The hiring the mid-December firings Van Brocklin at Minnesota. of Gilmer followed of Wilson's five assistant coaches and Wilson's later resignation. Gilmer, 38, a quarterback for the Lions in 1955 and 1956, had been top aide to coach Norm berta snapped that string with) national body's statement, made in London Wednesday, fails to alter the situation. This was a reference to the dispute between the NCAA and the AAU for control of amateur athletics, particularly track and field, "My only comment is that a simiiar statement has been made by the IAAF in the past and I see nothing new here that alters the situation at all," said Byers. The NCAA's annual conven- tion, which opens Monday, is scheduled to consider an amendment proposing strong penalties to back a bid for at least a share of jurisdiction over major competitions, now held by the AAU. The international federation's statement Wednesday, made by the Marquess of Exeter, its president, emphasized that the AAU will continue to be recog- nized by the world track and field body as the sole govern- ing body in the amateur ath- Gilmer was a record-setting) \tetic an in the United States. passing star of the 1940s for| Alabama's Crimson Tide and} a bowl games hero. the playoffs when it lost a squeaker to Rich.rdson's crew. |}; They were engaged in a 5-5it deadlock after six ends but RAMADAN STARTS CAIRO (AP)--Ramadan, the Moslem holy month of fasting, began Sunday. A hundred ion Mosiems will be requii '0 fast from dawn until dusk every day for 30 days. this SATURDAY Jan, 9th - 7:15 P.M. MONTREAL JUNIOR CANADIENS OSHAWA GENERALS JIM LANG TICKET SERIES NO, 6 Tickets on sale ot... © BISHOP'S SPORTING GOODS--151 KING EAST, OSHAWA @ BOLAHOOD'S SPORTSHAVEN---61 KING EAST, OSHAWA @ AUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M, -- CLOSED SUNDAYS FREE PARKING FOR 750 CARS Richardson moved into a com- manding lead with single counts in the next three ends. The Roberts foursome made a gallant bid in the 10th but could count only two. Going into the game, the two rinks held 2-2 records. Richard- son went on to finish up with four straight wins to enter the playoffs while Roberts finished the round-robin well down in the standings with a 2-5 record, los- ing his last five games. BAD BOY DEFINITELY 5 Yeor Guarantee made by Beatty, Free food plan. Free delivery, PRICED FROM SELLS FOR LESS! FREEZERS - 21 CU. FT. $198 | R.C.A, VICTOR DO IT NOW WINTER'S the TIME! | of Memphis, Tenn., was signed after playing together for the to a contract calling for a $1,000 ee te more than 3,000 tickets had first time and being hailed by been sold by this time. Dei- 3-WAY HOME THEATRE For remaining. Nedomansky, 21, the rookie forge, who heads the Milwaukee bonus and an $11,000 salary. office operation in this last sea- son before the Braves move to Atlanta, said the club would wait "for an expression of in- terest on the part of the pub- NHL BIG SEVEN the coach of the defeated Czech national team as second only to the world champion Russians in 'amateur hockey. "They're the best team we've centre New York Rangers of the National League have put on their. negotiation list, put the Czechs in front early in the first period but the Canadians never Detroit Red Wings bowed 5-2 played outside of the Russians," trailed again after Millar tied FM/AM _ Radio, Changer, Cabinet. Free Home Service. VALUE 4 Speed Automatic 23" TV all in one Walnut $479.00 3303 Renovating and Clean-Up Jobs! When Men and Materials are Available! the score at the 10-minute mark while killing a penalty. Would Nedomansky go to the NHL? | "Czechoslovakian players are|f' not for sale," said Vladimir} Kostka, another Czech coach, | "America is a foreign coun- try to him. . . . He would not be at home. . . . He goes to university in Czechoslovakia. "It is the highest honor for a Czechoslovakian to play in a national team ashe is now... . It is like the NHL in your coun- try. SPECIAL! NOW HERE'S A REAL BUY! was the assessment of coach only National Hockey League|Viadimir Boucek after the game played, but Gordie Howe|Czechs took a 5-3 beating from scored both Detroit goals to|the improvised club. move into sixth place in the| "J wish we could play the Scoring race. | Russians now," said Ted Power, The two markers, both on|eoach of Woodstock Athletics of |Power plays in the third pe-|the Ontario Hockey Association jriod, were Howe's 10th and 11th|senior series, who handled the Sah season, ppg points gave} winners. Owe a total of 31 and a firm) Boucek's ranking tacitly grip on the sixth spot, downgraded the Canadian na- |. There were no other changes|tional team, which has a win, jin the Big Seven. a loss and a tie against the | The leaders: Czechs on their current North American tour and plays them again in Toronto Sunday before their climactic meeting in the world tournament at Tampere, Finland, next March, A breakaway goal by Rick/| Hay of Guelph Regals, his sec- ond of the night, broke a 3-3 tie for the All-Stars early in the third period. Joe Hogan of Galt lic" before deciding whether to launch any ticket selling pro- motion. WILL CHECK DEAL WASHINGTON (AP)--Cahri- man Phillip A. Hart, (Dem.! Mich.) said Thursday his U.S.) - Senate anti-trust sub-committee plans to look into the Columbia Broadcasting System's pur- chase of New York Yankees baseball team. SIGN TEXAS STAR NEW YORK (AP) -- Olen Underwood, centre and deten-| R. Hull, Chicago sive end on the Texas Long-|Mikita, Chicago horns' Orange Bow! champions,| Ullman, Detroit signed a contract with New)Provost, Montreal York Giants of the National|Esposito, Chicago Football League Thursday. The|Howe, Detroit 22-year-old Underwood, six-foot-|Gilbert, New York three and 220 pounds, was the|Goyette, New York Giants' 14th draft choice. Pilote, Chicago ) CLEARANCE of | 1964 JOHNSON | to Boston Thursday night in the Hand wired circuit, full power trans- former. Up-front tuning, AGC circuit, 23" BIG SCREEN TV Swin-out chassis, Convectaire Cooling, Fidelity tone audio system. With trade WE ARE OPEN EVERY NIGHT wionsoay Ti 9:30 P.M. FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Everybody Knows the Place--Bad Boy--King St. E. 728-4658--4659 SUPPORT YOUR WINTER EMPLOYMENT CAMPAIGN G A Pts, 54 40 38 34 WHILE IT LASTS ! 72 227 Call Your Local NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT OFFICE 314 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH OSHAWA It's the OK SIGN for me!! 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