Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Jan 1966, p. 6

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Hockey teams often take ex- treme measures to shake off a slump, and Oshawa Generals no exception. "Generals went into the week- end, having managed only one point in five previous starts. They juggled lines, switched goaltenders, benched two play- ers -- one of whom subsequent- ly quit the club -- and brought Jerry Dionne and Don Bowen up from the Oshawa Crushmen. Nothing worked, and the slump is now two losses longer. Two one-goal losses to St. Catharines Black Hawks, 4-3 here on Saturday and 9-8 in St. Kitts Sunday afternoon, dropped Oshawa into third place in the OHA Junior 'A,' six points be- hind the leading Peterborough Petes. IN ST. KITTS ~ Crushmen goalie Dave Gavel moved into the line-up Sunday, giving regular Ian Young his first rest of the season. Oshawa general manager Wren Blair said he felt. Young) was due for a rest, and the in- sertion of a rookie goalie might! stir up the forwards. } It stirred them up all right, | but their eight-goal splurge was) nullified by two Hawk goals in} the last four minutes of play. | Crushmen defenseman Don} Bowen was called up to replace! Barry Wilkins. Coach 'Bep'| Guidolin benched Wilkins for his poor play Saturday. At the) end of the second period, Wil- kins changed into street clothes) and informed -the club he was quitting. Guidolin and Blair have ar-| ranged to meet with Wilkins | today, and it is possible he may) return. Guidolin and Blair are also) dissatisfied with the play of | 1, Generals: Generals Drop. | Winless String Now Seven Ron Dussiaump;~aad he didn' make the St. Catharines trip. Wayne Cashman and Brian Morenz scored two goals each on Sunday. Singles came from Paul Cadieux, Billy Little, Dan- ny Sandford and Bobby Orr. Little and Bob Black added three assists each, Little's four points making him Guidolin's choice as by far the best Gen- eral on the iceg Nine players shared the Hawk scoring: Jan Ppoiel, Jean-Paul LeBlanc, Ken Laid- law, Tom Reid, Kerry Bond, Doug Shelton, Paul Terbenche, Richie Bayes and Gary Mac- Millan. Laidlaw netted the win- ner with less than two minutes remaining. GENERALS: Orr, Beverley, Cadieux; Heindi," Hayes, Black, Cashman, HAWKS: Goal: defence: Bowen, Morenz, White, Gavell; Roberts, forwards: O'Shea, Little, Babcock, Sandford. Holmes; defense: Reid, \Terry, Terbenche, Salavarra; forwards: |Laidlaw, Popiel, Stu Roberts, Sicinski, |MacMillan. Stanfield, Bayes, Shelton, eer LeBlanc, Bond, FIRST PERIOD Cadieux (Cashman) 2. Black Hawks: Popiel (Leblanc, Laidlaw) 16.20 Peng.: Reid 2.45, MacMillan 3.18, Little | 4.58, O'Shea 9.28, Cashman 13.54. SECOND PERIOD Black Hawks: Reid (Popiel, LeBlanc) 4, Black Hawks Bond (Shelton,! Salavarra) ... Generals: Cashman (O'Shea, | Little) Black Hawks: Shelton (Terbenche, Popiel) Generals: Sandford (Black, Morenz) 17.57 Generals: Morenz j (Black, Roberts) 18.16 Generals: Orr (Little) 19,42 ens.: Black 2.49, Latinovich 2.47, Bab- Latinovich 12.50, MacMillan Jim Roberts, Bond | Goal: dim o 16.11 % + 9,52 » 11.30 5. | 13,10 6. 17,31 7. 8. 9. P cock 4.22, 12.50, Hayes 15.43, 19.04, THIRD PERIOD. Generals: Cashman (Little, Orr) Black Hawks: Bayes (Shelton, Bond) Black Hawks: MacMillan (Terbenche, Salavarra) Generals: Little (O'Shea, Orr) 10. 1.21} nN, 12. 13. Steelers Rally For Tie. Pete Vipond Nets Three By CLIFF GORDON Whitby Lasco Steelers fanned/ their flickering playoff hopes| "Sunday night as they battled] from behind a 5-1 deficit at the| end of the first period to gain a/ 6-4 tle hives. The single point leaves) the Lascos one point out of sixth) place. Pete Vipond paced the Whitby attack with three goals. Kevin O'Shea, Don O'Donoghue and Tommy Lavender added singles. Sal Spanpinato, Mack Hickox, Carl Hadfield, Jim Burford, Mike Lynch and John Danby scored for the home-town Bee- 1 1 1 1 with the Dixie Bee-\:svender 1419, Cheesman 19.57. Cheesman 12.38, | FIRST PERIOD Spanpinato P. Hickox) Dixie: (Hadfieid, §.15 2 3. 4 Dixie: Hadfield (P. Hickox) nai Whitby: Vipond (O'Shea, Lavender) i 5. Dixie: Burford (Ego, Baker) 6. Dixie: Lynch (Davis) Penalties: O'Shea .55, Keelman SECOND PERIOD 7. Whitby: Vipond Layender) : O'Shea ee | Penalties: Davis 6.59, Burrows 12.19,/ THIRD PERIOD Lavender Danby (Davis) . pond 7.41 » Whitby: P hed 10. Dixie: 1. Whitby: i (Cheesman, Lavender) ... 2. Whitby: O'Donoghve (Cheesman, Chalmers) ges VOOR 5.57, M. Hickox Cheesman 19.08. - 13,55! Keeiman Penalties: 3.13, Quintiilian 15.25, hives. Steelers got off to a poor start as they were doing almost everything wrong.. They were not skating, checking or shoot- ing. Coach Jim Cherry, in an effort to shake the club, re- ced goaltender Moore pith ike Houghby for the final two periods. He gave up one yo a Whitby was short two players. Darryl Leach, a grade 13 stu- dent, was studying, while Mike Taylor is sidelined with a knee injury. There will be no home game this week because of tonight's AllStar game in Weston be-| tween Etobicoke Indians and} the Metro Jr. 'B' Stars. Wayne Cheesman is the only local player selected for the game. Next home game for the} Steelers is on Sunday night when West Clair York Steelers CRUSHMEN PLAY AT HOME-AWAY When is a home game not a home game? It sounds like a_ riddle but it isn't; it's the situ- ation facing the Oshawa Crushmen, currently in first place in the OHA Lakeshore Junior 'B'. Crushmen travel to Co- bourg tonight to meet, the Cougars in what is offic- ially an Oshawa home game. it is the second time 'this month Crushmen have had a home game on the road. An Oshawa victory over the tai-end Cougars would give them a four-point bulge over second-place Kingston Frontenacs. Game time in Cobourg is 8:00 p.m. | | | bench, 355 around the St. Catharines net) GENERALS: Goal: Young; defense: scored five goals and assisted Napiorkowski one. --------! with a half-minute remaining, |Orr, Beverley, | but | equal |hand, but the Oshawa support- ers most of the game. At one point early in the third period they) | were out-yelled by a handful of . | Hawk rooters. : Dixie: M. Kickox (Ego, Lynch) 5.56] few continued his 14.02) early-season 15-1! lugging the puck out of his own} 721,/end to bail the Gens | trouble. } + S1| While unhappy pith the slump, Blair is accepting it philosophi- cally. "The league is getting so (roughing) 15.29, Latinovich goons 13 jed Montreal Junior Canadiens 6-3, Peterborough Petes defeat- u ed Kitchener Rangers 8-5 and|halfback Rp/Heller, a late cut Hamilton Red Wings Toronto Marlboros 5-3 in OHA/€rs Junior 'A' games played Sun-| League. day. '|for Paiement, Don Webster adding the others Don and Robert | Montreal. jtwo points ahead of the Flyers, | got Redmond and one each Joe Johnston, John Vandenburg }Don Herriman, George Godson|nual meeting of the Canadian jarid Dale MacLeish. Don Luce| Amateur Spotts Federation will scored a pair for Kitchener and/be held at Ottawa Jan. 22 and| jay, January 17, 1966 | 6, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mond: = To Hawks, Jshaw Nawth | hr North Oshawa Pee Wees reg- istered their ninth-straight win on Saturday, a 7-1 trouncing of Sunnyside, to take sole pos- session of first place in the Neighborhood League. Larry Hopkins netted three) and Mike Noonan scored two for the winners. Singles came from John Thaler and Dave Whitsitt. Bob Bathe was the! Sunnyside scorer. Eastview, meanwhile, drop- ped one point behind the leaders when they were held to a 1-1 tie by Connaught. Tom Wilson scored-for Connaught and Colin Lockey for Eastview. Kingside downed Fernhill 4-2 on goals by Randy Wetherup, Morgan Self, Rick Baxter and John Jeffs. Randy Welsh and Phil Woodcock scored for the sosers. : Stan Ball scored two goals) for Brookside, including the win- : ; ner late in the agame, as they | tight," he said, "'that it's im-| shaded Valleyview 3-2. Peter jpossible to say who will finish|Pawlenchuck scored the other 13.35/on top, All the top clubs have!Brookside 'goal. Scoring for! had their: slumps' and we're|-----------___------------ nerere (Leblanc, Reid) 18.12 having one now. But at least! Pens,: Sandford 2.58, Little 9.54. now we've starting scoring! ' * . . , He pointed out the a oy S KEN LAIDLAW BILLY LITTLE 14, Black Hawks: Leblanc (Reid, Laidlaw) 15. Generals: Morenz (Cadieux, Black) 16, Black Hawks: Terbenche 17. . Black Hawks: Laidiaw ON SATURDAY goals.' Laidlaw led Hawk scorers in| nosedive began after a 10-8 win Saturday's encounter with aj in Montreal. Sunday's game. was pair. Other goals came from| the same type of wide-open con-| Popiel and MacMillan. Danny) test, and he hopes it might have O'Shea seored twice for Osh-|the reverse effect... . Wednes- awa, and Bobby Orr once, day night would be an ideal Be te .:;, {time for Generals to get back Larry Holmes was one of the/ into the win column. They host Hawk heros, He kicked out 41|/S¢Cond-place Niagara Falls, and Oshawa drives, 16 in a wide with the Falls having games-in- F : ..; hand, an Oshawa win is a must at i ee eae bose | if they are to climb in the stand- 7 iB ings. Game time is 8.00 p.m., With Young sitting on thelinstead of the 7.15 Saturday Generals | scrambled) starting time First-place Bad Boys bombed| Foley's 9-2;. Juveniles downed| downed Honest Cal's 4-2 and L| and R Service Centre. nipped! Quality Fuels 7-6, in Senior | Hockey League action at Brook-| lin Arnea, on Thursday night. man display for Bad Boys. Jim Roberts. Cadieux, >» 7 ad he|Wikins; forwards: O'Shea, Morenz, on andthe r, and played a stand the /Heindi, Little, Babcock, White, Dionne, out defensive game. Jim Top- Black, Cashman, Dussiaume, Sandford. i i fine HAWKS: Goal: Hoimes; defense; Reid,| INS turned Br another were ON Terry, Terbenche, Salavarra; forwards:; game in goal for the bebe adil Laidiaw, Popiel, Stu Roberts, Sicinski,| Phil Lo' yas the best Foley's| "|MacMillan, Stanfield, Shelton, Bayes, biighe Metleet l Seite for] Latinovich, 'LeBlanc, Bond player, collecting a goal a' FIRST PERIOD assist. 1, Black Hawks: Popiel (LeBlanc, Laidlaw) Generals: Orr ey Black Hawks: Laidlaw i (LeBlanc, Popiel) Py mt Black. Hawks: MacMillan Paul Cadieux was one of the (Sicingki, Latinovich impressive Generals. He) Pens.: Bond (interference) 2.20, climb. back ° to\varra (hooking) 2.58, fora Dussiaume | | they couldn't izer. Almost 2,900 fans score were strangely silent FIRST PERI 1. Bad Boys: Ron Myle; No Pens 46 17.54 SECOND PERIOD : 2. Bad Boys: Gord Wilson 19.47; (John Devitt) . : Sale| JammeDevie Mike Gray). } (heoki liohn Devitt, Mike Gr | 6.35, Thuaraens 90 Te) | 4. Bad Boys: Mike Gray frequently|benche (tripping) 11.10, Little (elbowing); .(oug Cole, Gord Wilson) 12.47, Reid (boarding) 13.27, Salavarra Bad Boys: Mike Gray (holding) 15.02 {Ron Myles, John Devitt) ... SECOND PERIOD 6. Bad Boys: Gord Wilson 5. Generals: O'Shea | (Ron Myles) (Cashman, Babcock) 18.50 7. Bad Boys Pens.: Holmes (tripping, served by Le- (Ron Myles) . Blanc) 8.11, White (major, fighting; mis- Pens: Gould (tripping) 4:17 conduct), Bond (major, fighting; mis conduct) 10.55, Little. (tripping) 14.12,| 8 Foley's: Phil Long Popiel~ (hooking, roughing), Morenz| 9. Bad Boys: Ron Myles (tripping)| 10. Bad Boys: Gord Wilson (Ron Myles, John Devitt) 11. Foley's: Gary Rowbotham (Phil Long, Tom O'Connor) 19:42 . 0.38. Pens: Topping 7:31, Myles 10:38, Gar 7. Generals: O'Shea (White) 17.49| rard 13:45, Garrard 15:13, Devitt 18:40 Pens.: Popiel (roughing), Orf (rough si jing) 1.09, Salavarra (interference) 13.17,, Daryl Hudgin was the big gun bibeatatnaiestints IPS for Juveniles; scoring a_pair.| 17 13 14 44 | Bill Waylong made several sen- 9 § %® |sational saves late in the game} ~~ |as Honest Cal's put on the SPORT BRIEFS "2s" out of Gord Wilson" GENERALLY SPEAKING: | THIRD PERIOD 13:57 » 17:03 SSRI VERSE is SER as . 18:34 THIRD PERIOD 6. Black Hawks: Laidlaw (LeBlanc, Terry) Petes, Flyers Boost Lead, Wings Gain | Jie eee AMERICAN -- Niagara Falls Flyers down-|ish Columbia Lions of the West- ern Football Conference Thurs- lday announced the signing of} Generals Black Hawks |netminder John Field received | stick. Defenseman Ken Bradley |finished the game in goal, stop- ping Juveniles on several occa- sions. FIRST PERIOD Juveniles: Daryl! Hudgin (Paul Brockman, Bill Morrison) 1:35 2. Juveniles: Ted Goodchild W231 Pens: Powless 10:31, Morrison 15:58 | SECOND PERIOD 3. Juveniles: Bill Morrison 4. Cal's: Brian. Fletcher (Archie Courtice Pens: Bradley 10:00, Lutton 12:19, Master 12:19 THIRD PERIOD 5. Juveniles: Daryl Hudgin tripped|!ast year by Green Bay Pack-)} 1 of the National Football SHARE LEAD Lie KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP)-- Ralph Hutchinson of the United States and Pat Fletcher of |Moentreal shared the individual jlead Thursday in the annual|- Jamaica Jamboree golf tourna- ment, after the second round had been rained out. Each had shot a 70 in the opening round. HOLD MEETING MONTREAL (CP) -- The an- Ted Snell. scored three goals the Flyers with Rosaire 4 Jean Pronovost and ig Lucien Grenier Burns scored for Liesenier, game, blamed a Bears breach of contract suit against defen-| sive coach Allen as "the last} straw' in his decision to quit. FORMER GIANT DIES TUPELO, Miss. (AP) -- An-| drew (Jackson) Reese, 62,, who! played professional baseball for} Peterborough, in first place three goals from Mickey} from ChE AA Lead Neighborhood Loop lover Rundle. Ron Finley and In Senior League Play 3/10. Quality: Al Glaspell Bob Cook, Bob Jones and Bruce/delegates from 70 amateur) four years with the old New Woac a Daa Valleyview were Jim Moss and Chris Hurst. Dave Tessier's two goals and Peter Grills' flawless goaltend- ing let Nipigon to a-4-0 win) | i H Mike Dionne were the other scorers. Baker scored four goals in} the. third. period to bomb Radio| success, with a full complement! wins and 6-0. Goalscorers were Clare Mc- Pherson with two and Bill Mill- ler, Stew Spiers, Mike Cawker! and Clare Bright. Dan Porte-| ous was credited with the shut- out. Bathe scored four times in| the first period and nipped) Woodview 4-3. Stan Cockerton) scored two. for the winners, and! Mike Stewart and Rod Brady| one apiece. Danny O'Brien led Woodview with two goals, with Tom Taylor notching the other.- | Goals by Jim Climpson and| |Vie Sirko gave Harman a 2-1 win over Southmead. Brian Bul- ger replied for the losers. Jerry Thorton registered both) goals and Mark Logan put on a great goaltending display as Storie. blanked Lake Vista 2-0. hip Foley's - h (Al Griffin, Bill Morrison) 6. Cal's: Gaylord Powless (Ted Lufton, Bob McDonald) No Pens Lyn Middleton's "four goals sparked L and R to their upset win over Quality Fuels. George 10:37 19:54 | Vail and Ted Napiorkowski were ie Gordie Wilson put on a one-| the best for the losers, with Vail 4e@sue, on 9 P He|getting a pair of goals and/|Civic Auditorium, FIRST PERIOD and R: Lyn Middleton Knocker) «scoes 12329 Dennis 0:11 SECON DPERIOD George Vail Glaspell) 3. L and R: Lyn Middleton (Don Arscott) 4. L and R: Lyn Middleton (Don Arscott, Mel Knocker) 5. L and R: Lyn Middleton (Don Arscott, Mel Knocker) ... 6. Quality: Ted Napiorkowski 7, L_and R: Don Dennis 8. Quality: George Vail (Ted Napiorkowski) 9. Quality: Ron Barriage © (George Vail) . 18;56 Pens: Glaspell 16:45, Knocker 18:5) THIRD PERIOD ek (Mel Pens: 2. Quality: (Al 2:15 4:03 9:46) + 10:13 + 14:33 Ma 17:04 0:48 11, L and R:Mel Knocker | (Nick Dennis) 3:30) 12, L and R: Mel Knocker (Lyn Middleton) 15:29 Pens: Dennis 11:16, "Middleton 17:09 Donevan Jrs. End Central's | 13-Year Reign An almost unbelievable rec- ord winning streak, dating back! Early in the third period Cal's|to 1951, came to' an end on Fri-|x Won one 4-Point Game. day night, when the Donevan| la cut over the eye-from a stray |Collegiate Junior basketball | yary 13, 1966.) team won their COSSA league game over Central Collegiate, 51-34. No Oshawa team had defeat- ed Central Juniors, in league play, for the past 15 years. An agressive pressing de- fense, led by Dane Tutton, kept Gentral's Cagers off balance throughout the game. Donevan left 20-to-18 at the half, but| gradually pulled away in the| jSecond session, as their strong/sure putt on the final-hole and bench wore Central down. Calder of Central, led all the| scorers with 19 points, despite | having to play with a heavily/ taped, injured ankle. For Donevan, Ihor Fil was} tops, with 12 points and Andy | Kit had'11, while Dave Mason, } who was outstanding with his| rebounding play, notched nine points. The rest of the evening be- a de | Frank Maroosis and Dr. "Bill"|4™ lat |treatment. 3|for the second time this season, /tended the Oshawa Protestant | 'Loses Match 'MIXED BONSPIEL Tea Wildgoose Rink 6 : : t cays a: ins Lander-Stark The Oshawa Golf Club's fourth annual "'local mixed' curling|take second bonspiel, with The Lander-| sion. Stark Trophy as the coveted top, High two-game winners in the| award, was held on Saturday |early was the rink skipped | and once again proved a big |by "Bruce Bradley, i | Bag thet Be 18 Py | Hie Hilda Black ' H a rani jack, skip, 30; Joan. Johns- izes in that divi-|ton, Hugh entation, Doreiny Munday and Elgin Munday, skip, 3. wins in the 9:9) o'clock draw, to Second Games S$, 11; John Greer, 5. 9; Bruce Bradley, 4 Eric Henry, Roy Si Ted Wi Elgin Munda' [Bob Patte ste |Herb Robinson, 8; | | Fran Maroogis and Bill Baldwin, skip, 4(W); |Marg Oatway, Don Stiles, Bea Kell and Cliff Kell, skip, 4({L). Second Games Bob Ross, 10; Rex Cox, 6. Bill Baldwin, 12;. Army Armstrong, 8, Jack Elliott, 9; Cliff Kell, 5. * | Jack Glover, 7; Gord Lofthouse, 6. Doug Langmaid, 9; Dave Lander, 3. Ted Chenier, 9; Don Storie, 5, Third Games Army Armstrong, 10; Cliff Kell, Bob Ross, 9; Jack Efliott, 6. Ted Chenier, 8(w); Doug Langmaid, Bill Baldwin, 10; Dave Lander, § Don Storie, 9; Jack Glover, 5. Rex Cox, 8; Gord Lofthouse, 4. and 4 i it} Secon late in the week and as it Patte, J(W); Roy Stephens, 7(L). Laura Robson and Ted Wild-|¢ight points. 11:00 O'CLOCK DRAW vi é Lander, skip, 9; m. Freebor trophy with three wins and a|Langmaid's tink, .to wi yang the winners their trophy-winning| Lander's rink, which had six|su ccd cone in ee j Mrs. J. Howson, John Howson, Mrs, D. mane i | ; be the top rink in the opposite | Saturday 's bonspiel consisted of} Bc Ross, skip, 6. ai and Harold Roughley; Marion | Russet, Tom Russell, Doris Cox and Rex Gl i strong and "Army" Armstrong, ski, 7; otal of nine points. They were| Supervising the entries and Marg Baldwin, John Maroosis, OTHER WINNERS the fine array of prizes. by the rink of May and Norma First Games vobarinerg Gibbs, Ross Gibbs, "Babs" Henry 'obson and Ted Wildgoose, skip, 7; Sue B. Greer, L. Corson, €. Hezzelwood and The weekly doubleheader Of |petty Roughiey, Harold Roughley, "Til" fielder, reached a , milestone, saw Cana-/(L). Boyle scored once, to save the |Herb Robinson, skip, 6. of 24 club rinks competing. one-win prizes were 'claimed by An unavoidable © cancellation Frank Black's rink, with seven turned out, the fill-in rink of|in the late draw, was established |Chty "Atcoriem' a; eric hema, goose, skip,;emerged with the High two-win score in this) vale Fh sree n_ third | Yer cry Helen Glover and Jack point-total 6f 14-plus-2, a big/Prizes in the section wi w margin. points. jorie and Don Storie, skip, 7; Lorraine "draw," was the entry of Marg| Jil' and Roy Stephens; Betty nuoay end ten tag @ d d Vern Freeborn; Helen and |°% skip, 4 |Mary Peterson, Ken Peterson, . Merelee |drawmaster's duties, while Closest. to' Ted Wildgoose's} Following are the complete Weatherup, Jacquie and Bob a Phyilig Corrin, Mer! Corrin, Jean Brad- y 45 "\ Eric Henry, skip, 5. 4 R NHL Atom League ssvr John' Kessler, 'Do' Robins and and John Greer, skfp, 6; Lois Smyth, Bob Smyth, Marg McCarten and Cliff) Sebaeees) i 1,000 FOR KALINE Oshawa NHL Atom|Stephens and Roy Stephens, ski, 7W);| , on Saturday, |Jane McDowell, Bill O'Donnell, Marion) |June 20, 1965, when he batted diens whip Red Wings 5-1 in| ,May Wetherup,, Norm Mhernerup,Jacaull inthe 1,000th run of his major Wings from the whitewash| Oshawa Novices Tie Peterboro' 'lie Peterboro created an opening inthe draw| points. 'oh 'ed 'Wildgoose. 'orma Wildgoose, Jim Walker, by Ted Chenier's rink, with| Tom McDowell, 12; Elgin Munday, & S ; | 'esey, M. Finley, B. Lander and day's honors, capturing the group was made by Dr. Doug |Dave ny Fy . Skip, 3. _in th ion with. high |" marie Libby, Walt Libby, Ev Langmald, win in their third game, giving | one-win prizes going to Dave angmmaid, sip, 10) Raine and Gord Lofthouse, skip, 4. : . ' sh Runners-up, as established to, The committee in charge Of|Famme, Drew Jacobi, Marg Jacobl and Madg: uddy and Ted Chenier, skip, 8; Babe" Baldwin,..Dr. John Maroosis, ' ? : 5 ah loan Dayis, Ray Davis, Sylvia Arm- Baldwin, with three wins and|J@ck Glover, with the "men Lawrence and Jack Ellioit, skip, 6. in the 11:00 o'c ock division. oes f A a Wie 508 0 . their wives were responsible for score was the 11 points scored results: 9:00 O'CLOCK DRAW Patte, skip, who h d three |, and Bruce Bradley, skip, 8; Joanne Norma Wildgoose, Jim Walker, Laura |Ab Robins, skip, 6. ' Saturday's Scores McCarten, skip, Al Kaline, Detreit Tiger out- at the !o'Donneil and 'Tom McDowell, skip, 7| the opening game, as Tomy | Jackson, Sam Jackson, Irene Jackson and| league career. An GENERAL TIRE HOW ARE YOUR TIRES? .J Duignan scored a pair for the winners with H. Hicks, M. Bellanger and K. Waller each getting singletons. en In the second game, Black} Hawks defeated Maple Leafs, | enthusiastic crowd at- oy GET A BRAKE INSPECTION! CHECK ELECTRICAL SYSTEM! 1 5 5 7 9 7 6 6 (Revised Standing as of Jan- Geta SAFETY CHECK-UP! Sandra Post = SEE OUR SERVICE SPECIALISTS 72 GENERAL TIRE SERVICE 534 Ritson Rd. South GENERAL TIRE ORMOND BEACH, Fla. (AP) Defending champion Phyllis Preuss sank a four-foot pres- x 2-1, in a stout-checking game.|Church Hockey League's '"ex- Hank Schram accounted for! hipition night," on Satuteay at both goals, for the Black Hawks |the Civic Auditorium, here, while Ken Morden notched the} " . ae | Feat! lane GoM: | Oshawa Novice All-Stars tied : jthe Peterborough Novice All- | mo 2-2 in the main attraction 10 e evening. The boys on | Lakeshore Inter. |these two teams are under 10 7: years of age. i Hockey Standing * Peterborough opened the scor- jing in the first period with a (Western Division) goal from Walton, assisted by} W LT GF GA Pts.|Bexe. Oshawa retalliated on a Cobourg 14 2 138 87 30 | goal by Peter Fallaise, assisted | Sunderland 10 0 115 94 20 |by Hoefs. Uxbridge 1 746515 | In the second period, Hoefs) xLittle B'tain 0 82.82 14 |scored on an assist from Glen! Port Perry 0 73 8212 Kirkham, giving the Oshawa! Port Hope 411 1 84111 9 |team the edge. | xSutton- | With three minutes left, in the Keswick 211 0 66111 6 |3rd period, Roy scored the tying) goal for the Peterborough Club. The second attraction of the jevening was the young 'Mite) |League," for boys under 7-years- |of-age, who skated into the} hearts of the spectators with] their determination to display {hockey ability. Black Hawks, paced .by Tom) Bathe, who scored twice, downed the Maple Leafs 5-1.) Adding to the scoring for the! |Hawks with singles were Terry Harding, Tim Wotten and Wayne, Hawthorne. Ken~ MacGregor} scored the lone goal for the beat Canadian junior champion| Leafs. » | Sandra Post 1-up for the South) Red Wings edged out the/ Atlantic women's amateur title| Rangers 3-2, in a see-saw battle. | Saturday, Slapping in singles for the Wings Miss Preuss, two-time Curtis| Were Bryan Bird, Jeff Roth and} Cup team member, had to over- Mark Sheridan. The marksmen come sensational chipping and|for the Rangers were Carson putting by the 17-year-old Mil- Campbell and Russell Spiers. ton, Ont., youngster, who was|j= l-up at the end of the morning} round. | | Jim Bishop | OSSA Prexy Well-known Oshawa sports| figure Jim Bishop was elected president of the Ontario Sports- 55a) tying the score late in the BY THE CANADIAN PRESS writers and Sportscasters Asso- ciation Saturday. He succeeds Rolly Ethier, Broadcast News, Toronto. Sports Director of radio sta- tion CKLB, Jim came to the city several years ago, after having built himself a _repu- tation as a winning lacrosse coach. In some 20 years of coaching, he can recall miss- ing just one league title. He planted the idea of org- * anizing a Junior lacrosse club in The Motor 'City, and the end! result was the Oshawa Green Gaels. Under Jim's guidance Gaels won their third-straight Minto Cup in 1964. One of the main functions of the Sportswriters and Sports- casters Association is the tp- coming Sports Celebrities Din- ner to be held in Toronto. The Green Gails have purchased three tables for the crippled children at the, dinner. Alllan Gilroy, CBC Toronto was named first vice-president of the Association; Hugh Bow- man, sports editor of the Guelph Mercury, second vice-president Ken McKee, Toronto Star; third vice-president; Steve Douglas, Toronto secretary, and Jack Se- cord, Toronto Star, treasurer. Fuel Oil CALL PERRY Dey or Night 723-3443 Ajax Shellettes Ajax Fleming Shellettes play- itby Arena Sunday night. Nancy ' Puckerin and Leona Sleep scored for Ajax, Sleep's game. Pat Wales and Judy Ain- slie were the West Hill scorers.| After dominating play_ early} in the game, Shellettes looked disorganized in the second half and only the goaltending by Nora Albey kept them alive, Next game for Shellettes is) on Sunday night, when they! meet Don Mills Seniors at Downsview Arena AILS TUNNEY BOSTON (AP) Former heavyweight boxing champion Gene Tunney, 68, has been in |New England Baptist hospital more than a week for what his doctor described as a checkup. His doctor did not disclose: whether Tunney is being tested for any specific ailment THINKING OF SELLING ' you w a | tors that they your property, again, ~. Oshawa, resulting ceiving 4 more and a bigger dowr Cell Doug. Carmichael , 7462 representing H. Keith Lid Realtor Reier one apiece. s, |for Hamilton with others going Are Held To Tie to Fred Speck, Kevin Pettit and |Don Giesebrecht. Wayne Carle- ton, West Hill to a 2-2 tie at|Martin scored for the Mdrili York Giants, died Monday fol-| lowing a short illness. Reese |was a third baseman-outfielder with the Giants from 1927-30. TAKES TITLE GLACE BAY, W.S. (CP)--Les Gillis of New Waterford, N.S. won the Canadjan junior tight- 'weight boxing championship} Saturday when he stopped de-| fending champion Buddy Daye of Halifax in 10 rounds of a scheduled 12-round bout. ROCHESTER WINS ROCHESTRR, N.Y. (AP) -- Rochester Institute of Technol- ogy built a steady lead after aj brief opening standoff for a 7-4) 55 exhibition basketball triumph | over University of Toronto. Sat- urday night | ' _ |sport governing bodies are ex- Peter Mahovlich scored twice! pected to mane: SEES STRONGER TEAM SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --| and Tom|Manager Herman Franks of es,|San Francisco Giants said Wed- ------nesday his baseball club should be stronger this year than in 1965 when it finished two games behind the pennant-winning Los Angeles Dodgers. ATKINS RETIRES CHICAGO (AP) --Owner- coach George Halas of Chicago Bears Saturday confirmed the retirement of vetéran defensive end Doug Atkins, who said the }move was' prompted by the George Allen case. Atkins, in jLos Angeles for Sunday's Na- tional Football League Pro Bowl | Brian Glennie Remember When... ? Henry Armstrong met Fritzie Zivic 25 years ago | tonight --in 1941 -- in New | York's Madison Square Gar- | den in the rematch for the world welterweight boxing title he lost to Zivic the' year #cfore. Armstrong was badly batteréd and the ref- eree stopped the fight in the 12th round. LOOK MA, WHAT MURRAY JOHNSTON'S DOING! He's putting all his nice student's suits, sport jackets, suburban coats, bench warmers, ski jackets and sweaters on sale at MURRAY JOHNSTON'S Half-Yearly Sale of fine clothing and furnishings. So this is your chance Ma, you always say that MURRAY JOHNSTON sells the best clothes in Oshawa, but that | am a bit too young for stuff that good. Now we can get some of that GOOD stuff from MURRAY JOHNSTON'S at 8 Simcoe St. North in Downtown Oshawa -- and get it at the price that really means a saving. So don't forget -- MURRAY JOHNSTON'S HALF-YEARLY SALE for Men, Young Men, Students and Boys starts THURSDAY, JANUARY 20th, A RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH $5.00 PER DAY = aiteace cn MILEAGE CHARGE FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP)--Marlene Stewart Streit of Fonthill, Ont., goes after ant unprecedented sixth victory} when North America's top| women amateur golfets meet 725-6553 this week in the Doherty tour- | ""| RUTHERFORD'S | CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS FABULOUS = | 725-6553 "i 14 ALBERT ST, EUROPEAN a loi WEDNESDAY NITE FROM ONLY 0.H.A. JUNIOR "A" HOCKEY WEDNESDAY NITE 8:00 P.M. - OSHAWA GENERALS 'Miayare Polls FLYERS Season. Ticket Holders Use Series No. 16 For This Game. longed to Central Collegiate, as their Bantams came through| with a convincing 42-25 triumph over Donevan and Central Sen- iors thrashed Donevan 106-32. Central Seniors were brilliant with their defense, ball-hand- | g including special Economy Excursion air fare from Mont- real effective April 1, subject to government approval. Here's the biggest bargain ever offered in European tours. See the places you've always dreamed of. You've never guessed how inexpensive a European tour can be. BOAC's "European Vacations 66" offers you tours taking ir the whole of Europe, including the Middle East and Iron Curtain countries. Get details today. Fill in the coupon now and send for our free 72-page full color guide or see your Travel Agent. SR EST RST Be Ge RO Re Re ee ee To BOAC, P.O. Box'426, Station B, Montreal 2, Quebec. Please send me % free 72-page book, 'European Vacations '66"', telling me how I can z | have a tour of Europe from as little as $314. z NAME: m ADDRESS: 3 * CITY ZONE?:..........e PROVINCE: BOAC $ CORPORATION WITH AIR CANADA a BS G2 os aa SS ES Ga E BRITISH OVERSEAS AIRWAY: ea a oes NICK BEVERLEY BUS SERVICE Leave Downtown 7:00 - 7:30 - 8:00. Return after the game. TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BOAC agent . . . 728-6201 AIR CANADA agent 728-6202 Four Seasons Travel 728-6203 'BOOK NOW FOR SUMMER "66" @ Bolahood Sportshoven Downtown Oshawa NEXT HOME GAME SAT., JAN. 22 Generals vs Peterborough TP.T.'s @ Jim Bishop Sporting Goods Downtown Oshawa » Auditorium Box Office S71 oS Ph At DLT Gee MM

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