Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Jan 1965, p. 15

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ki SWEDISH STAR GIVES COACH A MASSAGE Ulf Sterner, 23-year-old Swedish hockey passing ace, gets playful with New York Rangers' Coach Red Sulli- van after being called up by the Rangers from the club's Baltimore affiliate. Scene is in dressing room at the Long Island training quarters where the Rangers prepared for tonight's game with the Boston Bruins. Sterner was a member of the Swedish National team 1967 CHAMPIONSHIPS By WALTER KREVEN WINNIPEG (CP)--The Cana- Amateur Hockey Associ- lation will seek formation of an ternational league and bid for /Ithe 1967 world championships which played last year in the Olympics at Innsbruck. He signed his first profes- sional contract in New York last September. --(AP Wirephoto) AGAINST PETES Jr. Wings Protest Late Starting Time HAMILTON (CP) -- Hamil- ton Red Wings of the Ontario|was made, both sides agreed to|Frank Mario claimed he had no Hockey Association Junior A series have forwarded a letter of protest to the OHA regard- ing a mix-up in the starting time of last Saturday's Junior A een the Wings and ) Petes at Peter- borough. The game was_ originally stheduled for Jan. 12 but was set back two weeks at the request of the Peterborough club so that a number of their players could join Montreal Junior Canadiens for an_ exhibition game against the Russian na- tionals Hamilton coach Danny Le- wicki said that when the change a 7 p.m. starting time because Wings had a Sunday afternoon game against Marlboros in Tor- onto. EARLY The club left Hamilton three hours earlier than usual. Satur- day in a fierce blizzard. They arrived in Peterborough before 6 p.m, only to discover that the game wasn't due to start until two hours later. Lewicki said he checked with the OHA before the team's de- parture and the OHA confirmed that the game officials were in- structed to report for the ear- lier start. HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario Junior A WLT F APt Niagara Falls 25 8 8 168117 58 Toronto 2611 3196 160 55 Peterboro 2013 6171 135 46 Oshawa 1717 7 162 167 41 Montreal 13 19 6 149 145 32 Kitchener 13 24 4164 214 30 St. Cath. 1020 7150 174 27 Hamilton 820 9 134 182 25 Tuesday's Result Peterborough 3 Oshawa 5 Tha 's Games &t. Catharines at Hamilton Niagara Falls at Peterborough 2211 0140107 44 2111 1159 9943 1715 0141 135 34 Oakville 1219 1134 165 25 Welland 622 0 97 165.12 Tuesday's Result Oakville 4 Guelph 9 Friday's Game Guelph at Woodstock .... «... Central Professional WLT F APt 2414 5156 110 53 2416 4158 147 52 2219 3147 144 47 2117 1142 133 43 13.22 4127 139-30 10 26 3117 174 23 Woodstock Minneapolis Omaha Tulsa St. Paul Memphis St. Louis Wednesday's Games St. Paul at St. Louis Minneapolis at Memphis Western League San Francisco 3 Victoria 6 astern League Greensboro 4 Charlotte 3 Exhibition West Germany 6 Fredericton Capitals 4 Toronto (OHA Jr. A) 1 St. Francis Xavier (MIHL) 4 Niagara Falls (OHA Jr. A) St. Thomas (OHA Jr. B) 1 Maritime Senior mouth 5 Halifax 2 Moncton 6 Quebec Provincial Senior Drummondville 2 St. Hyacinthe 5 Ontario Central Senior Collingwood 6 Newmarket 10 Midland 4 Orillia 3 St. Lawrence Senior Hull Volants 4 Ottawa Mon- tagnards 2 Thunder Bay Senior. Port Arthur 3 Fort William 5 Central Junior A Smiths Falls 4 Brockville 6 Ottawa Primroses 19 Arnprior 3 Cornwall 6 Hull Hawks 1 Ontario Junior B Chatham ° London 2 Windsor 4 Sarnia 6 Saskatchewan Junior British Star Gets 4 Years OTTINGHAM, England (AP)--Jimmy Gauld, one of 10 professional soccer players charged with throwing games in 'order to win bets, was sen- tenced to four years in jail Tuesday and ordered to pay $14,000 legal costs in Britain's biggest trial involving soccer es. Nine other players also were en jail terms. The trial of the players came after revelations in a Sunday newspaper, The Peo- ple. Arthur James, the prosecu- tor, said Gauld was the central figure and had corrupted other players. He told the court that Gauld, former Mansfield Town inside forward, made $16,170 out of betting on soccer matches and received $20,272 -- The People for his revela- ns. Jack Fountain and Brian Phil- were sent to jail for 15 months and Phillips was or- dered to pay 50 guineas ($157.50) legal costs. Richard Beattie, another of the pro players, was jailed for nine months and Kenneth Thom- son got six Estevan 2 Brando n4 Moose Jaw 7 Saskatoon 5 Weyburn 9 Regina 3 Central Alberta Red Deer 3 Drumheller 0 Edmonton 0 Lacombe 7 North Shore Chatham RCAF 5 Bathurst 3 St. Francis Xavier | Defeats Marlboros ANTIGONISH, N.S. (CP)--St. |Francis Xavier University X- men stunned Toronto Marlboros with speed and deadly passing ial Cup champions 4-1 in an Hockey League, led 3-1 after the first period and scored the only goal of the third. Al Os- borne scored the only Toronto goal. Toronto was outshot 31-26. Halifax junior All-Star 11-1 in Halifax Monday night. BASKETBALL SCORES National Association \9-3 for the Hamilton club's sec- New Glasgow 3 Windsor-Dart-| to defeat the defending Memor-| exhibition hockey game Tues-| day night. The X-men, who play in| the Maritime Intercollegiate) The OHA team trounced a| team | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | He said Peterborough coach knowledge of a mutual agree- ment calling for the 7 p.m. start. The Petes defeated the Wings ond-straight loss after running their longest unbeaten streak of the season to four games. Japanese Ace To Again Pitch For S. F. Giants SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--Ma- sanori Murakami, southpaw re- lief pitcher and the only Jap- anese ever to play major league baseball in the United States, will play again this season for San Francisco Giants, the Na- tional Ieague club. announced this week. Where the 21-year-old Mura- kami will play in 1966 remains jundecided after discussions last {week and this weekend between Giants and representatives of the Nankai Hawks of Osaka, Japan, who once owned the hurler. Giants, who count heavily on Murakami for short-inning re- jlief, said he arrives in San Francisco Monday from Japan. The Hawks' contingent, led by Managez Kazundo Tsuruoka, agreed io allow Murakami to pitch in the United States in 1965 but asked for him back in 1966, the Giants said. After finishing the season for the Giants' farm club at Fresno, Calif... Murakami joined the major league team and hurled 15 impressive innings for San Francisco. He compiled a 1.80 earned run average although he didn't figure in any deci- las a centennial project. onto. In conjunction with its. world) bid the CAHA will purste its proposal for an international league of national teams from Russia, Canada Will Bid For World Puck Playoffs CHUK |scheduled for centres near Tor-Jnegotiate for affiliation of the' Canadian Intercollegiate Ath- Union with the CAHA was formed. Danny McDonald of Toronto, U hockey. committee chair- man, said the CIAU 'needs Delegates to the semi-annual|Czechoslovakia, Sweden, thelCAHA sanction for a plan for weekend United States and Canada. an international collegiate tour- the the CAHA to sub-| The proposal calls for a 24-Inament in Canada in 1967. tional projects to the Interna- tional Ice Hockey Federation during. the 1965 world cham- pionships at Tampere, Finland March 4-14. A committee report said Can- ada would bid only for the A pool of the 1967 championships. The B pool would be held in Europe with possible CAHA financial assistance. Failure to get the world tour- nament would see the CAHA ask ITHF support for a special icentennial tournament involv- ing Sweden, Czechoslovakia, the United States, Russia and Canada. The report said the 1967 championships would likely be assigned to three major arenas '--Montreal Forum, Maple Leaf Gardens and Winnipeg arena-- with possibly some games Doctor Emery Quits Piloting After 2nd Spill ST. MORITZ, Switzerland (AP)--Dr. John Emery of Tor- onto, veteran Canadian bobsled driver, gave up piloting Tues- day after his second bad spill on the St. Moritz Olympia run. He had been scheduled to drive Canada's No. 2 sled in the world four-man championships this weekend. Emery, a bobsled driver for six years, said he may ride on the No. 2 sled but that Lamont Gordon of Montreal probably will take over as pilot. Vic Emery of Montreal is driver of Canada's No. 1 sled, which seeks to retain the world title won in last year's Olympic games. ; Emery was in the pilot's seat Tuesday when the sled over- turned at Devil's Dyke, the same place where he ha a ba fall in the two-man champion- ships last week. He bruised both knees badly and said this may prevent his getting enough training to ride im the cham- pionships. OTHERS UNHURT : None of the three crew mem- bers, Paul Levesque of Mont- real, Rev. D'Arcy Coulson of Ottawa and Purvis McDougall of Montreal, was badly hurt. game schedule with each team playing three home games and three away games against each other member. Delegates decided to turn vakia that a Canadian. junior team participate in a proposed world championship this year because of conflict with Cana- dian playoff dates. A three - man committee to Huge Fine Plus 4 Years In Jail For Soccer Fix NOTTINGHAM, England (AP) -- Jimmy Gauld, one of 10 pro- fessional soccer players charged with throwing games in order to win bets, was sentenced to four years in jail today and ordered to pay $14,000 legal costs in Britain's biggest trial involving soccer fixes, Nine other players also were given jail terms. Jack Fountain and Brian Phillips were sent to jail for 15 months, Richard Beattie for nine months and down a request from Czechoslo-| 196 WILL COST $152,000 Juckes revealed it will cost an estimated $152,000 to oper- eon Canada's national team in The CAHA faced an unex- (pected $10,000 travel bill be- cause many team members could not leave jobs and studies for the required 32 days in Eur- ope. This will force a platoon sys- tem which will see 17 players flown to Europe for the exhibi- tion tour and 13 to Finland March 1 for the world tourna- ment, Most of the meeting's open- ing discussion Saturday centred on playoff dates. It took six hours to resolve western junior dates after delegates said a playoff format drawn up at the annual meeting in May would result in financial loss. The CAHA decided to termin- ate its agreement with the Amateur Hockey Association of the United States because the U.S. organization is not abiding by terms of the agreement, particularly in regard to trans- fers and suspensions. CAHA officers were directed to begin negotiations to draw Kenneth Thomson, Ron Howells and Samuel Chapman for six months. Tony Kay and Peter Swan, both English international play- ers, and David Bronco Layne drew four-month jail terms. Kay, Swan and Howells were ordered to pay $280 each to- ward the trial costs and Foun- tain $146. The trial of the players came after revelations in a London Sunday newspaper, The People. Arthur James, the prosecutor, said Gauld was the central fig- ure and had Gauld, former Mansfield Town inside forward, made $10,170 out of betting on soccer matches People for his revelations. Niagara Falls Flyers Whip St. Thomas 9-1 ST. THOMAS (CP)--Niagara Falls Flyers, current leaders of Junior A_ series, Ontario Junior B League 8-1 in an exhibition game Tuesday night. RUTH JESSEN Having Her SEATTLE (AP) -- Twenty pairs of expensive golf shoes and a life raft took up only a small corner in the stuffed trunk of Ruth Jessen's big white sedan when the girl who had her throat cut for career's sake came home for the holi- jays. Fifty blouses, 20 sweaters, 30 to 40. pairs of shorts, 20 cock- tail dresses, four fishing rods, 2% pairs of slacks, three dozen golf gloves, four sets of golf clubs... . "And that's only mine," the chic blonde bomber of the fair- ways said Monday. "'Peggy has just as much." Peggy is Peggy Wilson, whose dark eyes are mischief-twinkled and whose voice is pure Mis- sissippi. The two are nomads of the golf links, so accustomed to long treks they thought nothing of a midwinter drive from Florida to Seattle to spend the holidays with Ruth's parents, WON FIVE sions. Throat Cut Started Golfing Success trademark is an unorthodox, spraddle-legged putting stance, won five tournaments in 1964 and earned $23,431 in prize money. This was second only to the $29,800 won by Mickey Wright, reigning queen of the Ladies Professional Golf Asso- ciation. : Success really began for Ruthie Jessen after--as she puts it--'I had my throat cut in 1963." A neck ailment was mak- ing each round of golf pure. tor- ture. "The surgeon said he would have refused to operate had I been a housewife. But for me it was a choice between taking the risk or giving up golf." Only a thin, nearly - vanished jine shows where the knife opened Ruth's throat. The sur- geon, going in from the front, removed a disc from the verta- brae and replaced it with a plug of live bone from Ruth's hip. "Three months later," said Peggy, 'Ruth was winning a Miss Jessen, whose golfing tournament at Rockton, Ill." original model of your choice. Thurs. Feb. 4nd Fri. Feb. Sth Glozing -- Pleasure in on ancient ort, Detroit 107 Philadelphia 105 Los Angeles 111 New York 99 145 fan Franc'co 107 MILLINERY Make your new hat through this oppor- tunity to learn the method of producing on Commencing Tues. Feb. 2nd 7:30 P.M. CERAMICS (Pottery) Working in clay to produce original, objects. firing -- use of potter's wheel. Commencing Tues. Feb. 2nd 7:30 P.M. A group meeti RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES Response to circulars mailed to all citizens of the community indicates desire for the following classes which are to be included as part of | this season's programme. Though some classes are filled several opportunities still exist in the following activities, and further registrations will be accepted till noon Saturday, January 30th. DRAWING & PAINTING ing Thursday evenings to re ceive instruction in bosic drawing and paint- . ing. Includes pastels, charcoal, water colours 7:30 P.M. 1:30 P.M. Preparing and hors d'oeuvres, --portraiture and introduction to oils. Commencing Thurs. Feb. 4th 7:30 P.M. Party Planning (Fancy Foods)' serving of fancy sandwiches, cookies, small cakes. Also cake decorating. A learn-by-doing series. 100 Gibb Street Commencing Mon, Feb. Ist 7:30 P.M, All series are 8 weeks duration commencing on dates shown. OSHAWA RECREATION DEPARTMENT For information and registration phone 725-1111 the Ontario Hockey Association downed St Thomas Barons of the Western up a revised .contract. Four Major Clubs Form Scout Pool PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Rep- resentatives of four major baseball league clubs mapped final plans Tuesday for a co-op-; erative scouting p: time scouts, each team will get reports from 60 to 76 scouts. Brown said each club will then make its own decision on bag prospect it wishes to aft. Alouette Star Wants Security MONTREAL (CP)--Halfback George Dixon of Montreal Alou- ettes, anxious to acquire job se- curity, has threatened to quit te Eastern Football Conference lub. Dixon said in an interview Monday that unless he can ob- tain a permanent position in Montreal he will return to his hometown, New Haven, Conn., to work. Dixon, who majored in indus- trial relations at Bridgeport Uni- versity, recently left a public re- lations job with a Montreal meat-packing firm. He now is looking for a new job and said he is contemplating going into business for himself. "T'm 29 and now is the time to make connections for the fu- ture,"" Dixon said, He saij he feels he has three or four seasons of football left but "football has no long-term THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, January 27,1965 1§ Warren Spahn Will Test Self MILWAUKEE (AP)--Warren Spahn, the 48-year-old hurler Remember When? ... By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bee See hist z waukee--was sold to New Y: Mets after the 1964 season, of his poorest, when he finished with a 6-13 8 buys... of 13 major league seasons, his training, with emphasis on his first start in an exhibition game. Spahn said he has a hunch that he and Yogi Berra will be battery mates on opening day when the Mets meet Los An- geles Dodgers. Berra, fired as manager of New York Yankees at the end of the 1964 season, now is a player-coach for the Mets. BRAKE ADJUSTMENT SPECIAL Most Popular Cars WE DO ALL THIS... % Pull Front Wheels * Adjust Brakes to full contact * Inspect whee! cylinders * re oe 0 hg ti Inspect front bral in| (front brakes wear tasted %& Add brake fluid, if needed % Inspect and lubricate emergency brake linkage GENERAL How fo relieve BACK? tole condi- causing the backache. Soon you feel better -- rest better. De- security." ay ACHE pend on Dodd's. TIRE GENERAL TIRE OF OSHAWA 534 Ritson Rd. South 728-6221 -- other players. He told the court that and received $20,272 from The DOMINION TIRE STORES BRAND X TIRE SALE These are first line, original tires that have been taken off new cars and exchanged for DOMINION ROYAL TIRES UP TO 7.75x14 7.75x1F 8.00x1/ 6.50x1' 8.15xl1 @ All Prices Include Mounting BETTER QUALITY AND SERVICE GUARANTEED | BY DOMINION RUBBER' Tubeless Bieckwall. Tubeless Blackwall (Equivalent to 750x14) Tuebless Blackwoll, List Price 30.40. SALE Yquivalent to 6.70x15) Tupeless Whitewall ist Price 33.45, SALE ist Price 34,10. SALE List Price 26.20. SALE (Equivalent to 7.10x15) Tubeless Blackwall List Price 34.10, SALE . eeeeeces eerreosces Trade CHARGE IT AT DOMINION INSTANT CREDIT $1 DOWN $1 WEEKLY DOMINION TIRE STORES # 48 BOND WEST (Corner of Church) 725-6511 FREE COMPANY LIMITED PARKING ! 0% OFF! Assorted Sizes @ Some Whitewalls 15.20 16.75 a DS ade soe W810 . 17.05 @ All Prices Plus Your Recappable

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy