Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Jun 1967, p. 12

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12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, June 15, 1967 "SOCCER STARS DISPLAY IDENTICAL FORM Philadelphia's Dietrich Ibrecht (white uniform) (7) display almost identical form as they kick the ball and Atlanta's Brian Hughes during a National Profes- sional Soccer League game in Atlanta. (AP Wirephoto) Top Golfers Expected To Strike Out On Own By WILL GRIMSLEY and on since the By THE CANADIAN PRESS Fishing for all varieties of game fish' was generally good in Ontario last weekend. The department of lands and forests, in its weekly report on fishing conditions in the prov- ince, said lake trout were al- ready beginning to head for deep water as weather alter- nated between hot and numid and warm rain. No unusual catches were re- ported, although some good- sized fish were taken. Activity is expected to pick up with the general opening of the bass sea- son June 24. Reports from 21 of the depart- ment's 22 districts: : NORTH Chapleau--Goose River and Big Missinaibi Lake the best locations in a weekend spoiled by continuing rain. Speckled trout and pickerel going after worms and. minnows. Cochrane -- Pickerell catches excellent in Little Abitibi lake chain and fair to good over Gaels Share League Lead ST. CATHARINES (CP) -- Toronto Township moved into second place in the Ontario La- crosse Association Junior A league Wednesday night by trouncing St. Catharines Lake- sides 17-7. Barry Salovarra paced Tor- onto Township with three goals and four assists. Bob Sicinski had three and Joe Hore, Tom Campbell, Brian and George Wilson two each. Single goals were scored by Mike Marks, Dan Russell and Bill McKenzie. Bob Melville scored three for most of district. Speckled trout only fair. Fort Frances--Pickerel and pike fair to good, lake trout fair, bass good and crappie poor. Pickerel biting best in Lake of the Woods and Nora Lake, a fly-in camp. Geraldton -- Excellent pick- eral and pike fishing in O'Sulli- van and Burrows lakes in Na- kina division; large pickerel were also coming from. Frank Lake in the MacDiarmid divi- sion. Rainbow trout biting well in Balancing Lake in Longlac division. Speckled trout poor everywhere except in Albany River. Murky Creek best of all areas for pickerel. Gogama -- Beaver, Duchesne and Minisinakwa lakes and the Grassy River produced good catches of pickerel and pike. Fine catches of lake trout in Tnovhinak ke included a 25: pounder. Speckled trout chas- ing minnows and worms in Lake 52, Ivanhoe Township; Lake 5, Burrows Township; and Helen's and Tahills lakes in Somme Township. Kapuskasing -- Pickerel good to excellent across the district, APPOINTED COACH QUEBEC (CP)--Vic Stasiuk, 38, a veteran of play in the National Hockey League, is to be coach of the Quebec Aces next season, Aces' president Bill Putnam said Sunday night. Sta- siuk will succeed Phil Watson with the American Hockey Lea- gue club. Deep Water Beckons Ontario Lake Trout with Oba Lake providing best catches. Speckled trout fair but improving. Kenora -- Pickerel generally excellent, with several larger- than-average fish coming from Lake of the Woods and Winni- peg River system. Big Stone and Sabaskong bays of the lake were the hot spots. Crappie, pike, bass and lake trout good in all waters. West arm of Ea- gle Lake produced a 27-pound laker. North Bay -- Only pike were biting well, with pickerel, lake trout and speckled trout catches fair. Lake Nipissing, Lake Tim- agami and the Martin River best for pickerel, Lake Tima- gami for lake trout. Best pike and speckled trout came from waters in McConnell Lake area. Parry Sound -- Pickerel good in Callander Bay and Wawash- kesh Lake. The other popular district spots, Georgian Bay off the Moon River and the French River, were disappointing. Trout poor, although some good rainbow catches in Skeleton River in Watt Township and some parts of Lake Rousseau. Pembroke -- Lake trout good from Louisa, Wilkins and Aylen Lakes. Catches of other trout species and pickerel generally fair. Port Arthur -- All. species produced fair catches in weather too wet to permit much fishing. Sault Ste. Marie--All species biting well, but the ranger didn't have a chance to make a complete check. He was busy cleaning up a 20,000-acre forest fire, one of several that made this the worst spring for fires in Ontario's history. Sioux Lookout -- Pickerel and pike fishing generally excellent once travel restrictions result- ing from a forest fire that forced the evacuation of the town were lifted. Lake trout heading for deep water. There still was ice in Big Trout Lake. Sudbury -- Fishermen enthu- siastic despite onslaught of blackflies and mosquitoes. Early catches indicated the dis- trict would have better fishing than last year. Pickerel catches good, especially from Lake Ni- pissing, French River and Agnew Lake. Lake trout good, with the best waters Manitou, Kukagami and the northern lakes, using lures. Speckled trout also good in the Massey, Soccer Players In Donnybrook DETROIT (AP) -- A player riot flared in the closing mo- ments of the Detroit. - Houston United Soccer Association game Wednesday night, halting the game with 17 minutes still to play and Houston ahead 2-0. The fight erupted when De- troit, represented by Glentorans of Belfast, was awarded a free kick 10 yards outside the Hous- ton--represented by Banju of Brasil--penalty area. "Houston's fullback Luis Al- berto laid out Detroit's Tommy Jackson cold with a kick to the kidney,' said a Cougar pub- licity official. "Then players from both teams swung into the melee," he said. "The benches emptied and several men were injured in the all-out kicking and fist fighting." Cartier and Thor lakes area using worms and lures. Swastika -- Despite wet weather, pickerel catches fair lake trout fair and speckled trout poor. Pike biting well in Watabeag and Larder White River -- Fishing gen- erally slow. Pickerel fair in Sheila and White lakes; trout were chasing large sucker in Kwinkwaga and Dayohessarah lakes. Lake Simcoe--Pike fair and fish good in Georgian Bay. Pike and pickerel fair, panfish goc¥ rivers. Pickerel fair in evern River. EAST Ottawa River, fair in Constance Lake and Rideau system, ,. i in White and Bennett lakes. Bennett lake best for pickerel with minnows the preferred bait. Lake trout catches fair, speckled trout poor. Lindsay -- Pickerel catches only fair, but speckled and rainbow trout good to excellent in Haliburton and Kawartha Lakes. areas. Tweed -- Lake trout excel- lent in Wollaston Lake, good in Lavallee, Wensley, Palmerston and Lucky lakes. Speckled trout fair in streams, fair to poor in whitefish good in Lake Simcoe.|lakes. Rainbow trout and pick- Pke good, pickerel fair and pan-jerel catches poor. WEST Lake Erie -- Hot, humid in Six Mile Lake. Lake Scugog}weather has restricted catches provided good fishing for pan-jof pickerel and muskellunge in fish, Speckled and brook trout|Detroit River, Lake St. Clair catches good in Boyne and Pinejand St. Clair River. Bass good and panfish|in lower Detroit River. The put- and-take ponds at Normandale, St. Williams and Pinery Park produced fair speckled and rain- Kemptville -- Fishing poor in| bow trout. FREE EST CALL . 728-9292 3 year guarantee -- 6, 12, WE NEED YOUR DRIVEWAY GROSS CANADA PAVING SERVICE CROSS CANADA PAVING SERVICE "We're not the lowest and we're not the highest." 20, 36 months to pay. IMATE OSHAWA Support your local chapter of the Carling Red Cap tour was)the PGA. Of these, only 200 are|St. Catharines and Brian Mel- SPRINGFIELD, N.J. (AP)--|started back in 1929, |tournament players. The others|Ville added a pair. John Swain There appears no immediate! In the 1930s, Leo Diegel led|are the club professionals, who|2%4 Neil Stevens scored one solution to the bitter fight be-ja player revolt which lasted a af z Z apiece. tween the Professional Golfers|few months, The late Ed Dud-|°CC@sionally venture onto the| 'The. game was the roughest Association and tournament/ley took over and put the tour|tour. The players insist thatjof the season with 87 minutes players for control of the|back in the hands of the PGA.|these so - called shop keepers|in Penalties, including three $4,500,000 tour. | In 1948, George Schneider led have too much voice in theirjgame misconducts and two Predictions in informed golf|another player break with the| affairs. match misconducts. circles today were that Arnold Palmer,' Jack Nicklaus, Bill Casper and 150 other touring pros would strike out on their own next month after the PGA national championship tourna- ment, scheduled at Denver. The question is: Can these transient pros run their own show? READY TO STRIKE The players gave the PGA until today to accede to their demands for greater control of the tour, including the privilege of setting tournaments, hand- ling television proceeds and naming administrators for the tournament bureau. The PGA insists it won't give in. "We can't live with that PGA, setting up a special fund from tournament receipts. The project failed and Horton Smith became tournament chairman under PGA jurisdiction but with! strict player control, Smith later said, 'It is impos- sible for the players to run their own tournament tour. They can't both play and adminis- trate. There are too many jeal- ousies and personality clashes." Smith became PGA president| and tightened PGA control over! the tour. He was convinced the| Players couldn't handle it. This situation has prevailed largely down through the years with the players gaining back certain privileges, but the PGA executive committee maintain- Kind of arrang " said PGA president Max Elbin of Washington. The PGA has issued an ulti- matum of its own -- effective ing a veto power on policy uh This veto power is what the| players want eliminated. There are 5,895 members of HARNESS RACING SLATE ETS also today. Under it, the 150 players who have signed a pro- testing petition must remove their names or be subject to possible suspension and with- drawal of playing privileges. ' The players say they won't do s WON'T AFFECT OPEN So the U.S. Open champion- ship, not affected by the feud because it falls under the juris- diction of the U.S. Golf Asso- ciation, will proceed as sched- uled with the player revolt tem- | porarily shelved. The day of accounting may not come until the PGA cham- pionship at Denver, July 20-24, although Elbi and the PGA ex- ecutive committee have invited the players to air their griev- ances at an open meeting in Cleveland Tuesday. The players indicated they may boycott it. "We have asked for meetings before and they won't listen to us," Doug Ford, a member of the four-man tour- nament committee, said. If the players boycott the PGA championship, as threat- ened, they will face suspension under an ethical provision of the PGA constitution. | "We have assurance from) most sponsors they will stick) with the players,' Ford said. | Every prominent tournament) player except Doug Sanders has} signed the petition threatening) a boycott and an independent association. Arnold Palmer and Julius Boros signed Tuesday. Bill Casper added his name) Wednesday. Jack Nicklaus was one of the more than 130 who/ signed two weeks ago at Mem- | phis. | It is a strange war of control, | but -one that has flared off TO ATTEND PLATE TORONTO (CP) -- Gov.-Gen. | Michener and Mrs. Michener| are scheduled to be at Toronto's Woodbine racetrack June 24 for | the 108th running of the Queen's | Plate. Lt.-Gov. Earl Rowe of| Ontario presided last year and | in 1965 Queen Mother Elizabeth! attended. THUNDERBIRD GOLF CLUB Golf lessons by appointment. CPGA Professional, Wilson Pot- terson, John Delorme, Bob Burrows, Club repaired, Electric golf carts for rent... $6 per round ASHBURN 655-4952 Automatic Transmission Specialists now in Oshawa at 337 Bloor St. W. ACE Transmission has been fixing transmission problems for 20 years, They are the largest trans- mission specialists in Canada and repair transmis- sions for most major retailers across the country. The ACE Code of Ethics assures you of honesty and integrity and the ACE six month or 6000 mile guarantee gives you the confidence of knowing that ACE stands behind their work. A lifetime guarantee is also available. The ACE guarantee is honoured by more than 300 depots coast to coast in Canada and the United States. If your car is not driving Port Perry Fairgrounds Fri., June 16th, 1967 Post Time 6:15 p.m. smoothly, bring it in to ACE for a free estimate -- it only takes a few minutes and a minor repair Job now could save you a lot of money in the future. TRANSMISSION GONE -- REPLACE WITH ACE -- CANADA'S LARGEST TRANSMISSION SPECIALISTS PARAMUTUAL WAGERING PHONE 576-1080 - --~-- ACE TRANSMISSION = Forever Association (CRCEA. Our salute. Right hand proudly extended, Thumb up, Fingers shaped as though clutching a Red Cap Forever mug. (Left hand clasped over heart.) Salute to be used during Red Cap Forever anthem. Acknowledging Red Cap flag. Or to signify Red Cap allegiance where beer is sold; Our local chapter. The drinkers true. One of countless chapters brought together by common bond of Red Cap's flavour; overall goodness; and popularity. To find Red Cap Chapter in your area, look for Red Cap flag (see above); Red Cap salute or our leader. Carling Red Cap Forever Association chapters every- where are flying this Red Cap : flag. (When you see one, you'll. know you're in friendly Red Cap territory.) Our leader. Red Cap Ale. Red Cap comes from Carling. And Carling make this great ale to beat all other beer. Joinus ina Red Cap and you'll join us in saying "Carling Red Cap. Forever." (Our leader makes personal appearances wherever beer is sold.) Carling Red Cap 'Forever T. R. McEWEN'S |

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