VOL. 84TNUMBER‘1‘6 And now the honest belief that what is happen- ing in Mississippi can’t happen here has been shat- tered. Maybe we feel so badly about it because the older we get the fewer illusions we have left and the more precious they become. When one of these last few illusions is proved to be just that â€" an illusion -â€" we feel like someone has just kicked another prop out of what We like to think of as the just and decent Canadian way of life. â€" SPORTS SPOTS â€"â€" Fred Bignell, a former resident of York County is a most persuasive man. Fred is a member of Bayview Secondary Bayview’s junior football team received a rude jolt last Week. Fresh from a 13-0 tri- umplh over Richmond Hill the Bayview team invaded New- market last week. Whether or not they expected Newmarket to roll over and play dead we wouldn’t know but the cocky, overconï¬dent Bayview squad were defeated 14-8. Fred Bignell, a former resident of York County is a most persuasive man. Fred is a member of the Toronto Stock Exchange Floor Traders Association, a group of hard-working men who band together to undertake good works and have a little fun along the way. This is the second time to our knowledge that Fred has been able to talk the rest of the group into a project to beneï¬t Thornhaven School for Retarded Children. In addition to the hockey game many other ev- ents are planned for the evening. Amateur ï¬gure skating stars Wei dy Griner and Hazel Pike will be giving demonstratims of the demanding art of ï¬gure skating. Bands and strutting majorettes will perform and cavort for the eiiï¬cation and delight of all specta- tors, along with many other attractions to beguile and delight the entire flmily. (?) had better refrain from drinking until they learn how to behave like gentlemen. What makes it most shocking to us is the fact that these people are the ones to whom we are looking for leadership in the future. Leadership in ideas, education and the arts. If the only leadership we can expect is of the Jim Crow and Birch Society type we’d better call it quits now. We’re in for a horrible future. On the night of October 26, a Friday night, the Floor Traders will exchange bumps and bruises in a hockey game at the Ted Reeve Arena, with the NHL. Old Timers. - Proceeds from the game are to go to further the Th ornhaven School project of a sheltered workshop, an Indertaking that will cost several thousand dollars It is quite possible that the authorities at the U. of T. have the matter well in hand. These were no downy-cheeked kids but in some cases were fourth year students. Whatever punishment they receive they are old enough to know that it was justly de- served. Too bad the stocks have gone out of style. The president of one of the fraternities involved in the hollering and Latâ€"calling defended his and his fraternity’s position by saying, “We did it but we didn’t start it’ â€"- and he went on to say that some of his group had been drinking prior to the game. If that was the sole reason then maybe these gentlemen Yes, admittedly this was done by a minority group. A long way back in 1933 Mister A. Hitler and his buddies were a/yninority group. And people laughed and forgot tl'rém too. Forgot just long enough, t at is. Charlie Conachzr of Maple Leaf Kid Line fame has been contacted to referee the hockey game. If he is unable to show that evening his place will be taken by another Leaf immortal, the one and only Frank “King†Clancy. Here’s a chance for you and the kids to see one (1' both of these legendary greats on the ice and on 51‘ ates. For a lot of people it will be the ï¬rst time the) ’ve seen either of ti ese two color- ful veterans, while for others it will bring a host of memories flooding back. ’The floor traders association deserves the highest commendation from us all for advancing the cause of the retarded child. Just recently a group of University of Toronto students at a Queens-Toronto football game sundered yet another illusion. They openly taunted a negro policewoman about her colour and allowed that they were in accord with the segragationists in Mississippi. To be quite fair about it only a minority of those at- tending the game took part in the incident. The dis- turbing thing is that it ever happened at all. For further information contact Ray Nugent at TU. 4-3888. Ray is another member of the association. Mark the date well and plan to attend if you pos- sibly can. Ted Reeve Arena is located at 175 Main Street in the east end of Toronto. It’s not too hard to get to from Richmond Hill and district in these days of ï¬ne roads and it is on Friday night. No getting the kids up for school next day! Admission is $1.00 for adults with children under 12 being admitted for 50 cents. And it’s really good, clean, family-type fUZl. Last winter 9. Maple Leaf Gardens hockey aud- ience shattered a long-cherished illusion that Toronto sporting audiences were an affable, well-behaved group of citizens. That was the night they took to throwing ï¬recrackers and eggs onto the ice to prove, no doubt’, that they could be just as uninhibited as a Chicago audience. Now and forevermore the halo of saintliness will always be somewhat tarnished. I963 MODELS ELECTROHOME 8. ADMIRAL TELEVISION 8. HI-FI'S Portable TV For Rent Richmond Hill TV 8. Appliances Second Section AV. 5-3756 . . . 34 Yonge St. S COME IN AND SEE THE ALL NEW SPOT SPOTS BY RON CRAINE TU. 4-7453 mg mmmfl, Both junior and senior soc- cer teams were paired off against St. Andrew’s College. Thornhill seniors won a 4-0 lshutout but their little brothers llowered the boom on the SAC [squad to the tune of a 10 - 1 mm. On the intramural front the gold team got the nod as the winners of the senior flag foot- ball winners. Junior intramural soccer was washed out as play- ers failed to Show up for sche- duled games. In grade 9 bord- erball the red color team emerged as the overall winners. Next week the seniors go to borderball, juniors to flag foot- ball and the grade 9 group to playing soccer. Maybe the grade 9’ers will show more in- terest in soccer than the jun- iors did. The story was very little block, weak tackling and some- times unim-aginative play call- ing on offence. As a result Newmarket, although outplayed at times went for two long touchdown jaunts that spelled defeat for Bayview. In their next outing this Thursday night they square off against King City in a game that they must win to keep their hopes alive in the conference circuit. Thomhill Secondary Thornhill’s powerhouse sen- ior football team rolled to an- other victory last week as they walloped Richmond Hill 33â€"0. It was a case of too much pow- er for the Hillers to cope with as the Thornhill seniors hit hard. often and relentlessly. The same senior team played an exhibition game against Bathurst Heights, northern ‘representative in the huge TDIAA loop. Thornhill proved that they could easily hold their own in what is renowned as the world’s largest football conference by whompivn-g the Bathurst Heights crew 29-1. There was no scoring in the ï¬rst quarter as both teams probed each other for defensive weakneï¬eSu As the second quarter got under way A] Fle- ming. sharing the quarterback- ing duties with Bill Dunn, toss- ed an eleven yard pass to John Morgan to open the scoring. The conversion attempt was smothered by the East York team. Knox Breaks Through Late in the second quarter. Duke Knox broke through the East York defence to rouge the quarterback behind the line of scrimmage and drove him into the end zone for a safety touch. The half ended with the Indi- a-ns leading 8-0. Third Quarter East York showed a spark of life early in the third quarter and kicked a ï¬eld goal from the Indian 25-yard line The play seemed to rouse the In- dians to a pitch of fury and they proceeded to run mp 32 points against the Yorkers without a reply. Indians Blunder With the ball in Indian pos- session at midï¬eld, third down and ten yards to go, Ian McIn- Richmond Hill High Jackie Dubkowski led the RHHS junior football team to a 28-12 win against Markham juniors. WitJh Dubkowski at the helm the Hillers cracked in for four touchdowns, one each by Jim Fleming. Tony Crack, Les Downing and Bruce Sim. Em- ploying a new type of often- sive move paid off handsomely for the Hill squad as Markham were not able to adjust to a de- fensive formation that would cope with the offence. The junior team played an exhibition game against Pick- ering College on Saturday and defeated the Newmarket team 19-0. Ian Ross, Tony Crack and Sid Actor were the point get- ters for Richmond Hill. Richmond Hill‘s senior socâ€" cer team defeated Pickering 6-3 but the green and white By RON CRAINE lslaught. An East York fumble . . . {was recovered on the East York The local tribe of football Indlans, smarting underthree yard line and Indian Levi a 13-12 Thanksgiving Day loss to the Eastenders, went'sMok crashed three yards for on the warpath against East York last Saturday. In a the major score. The convert by preview encounter, East York was able to hold the McIntosh was good as the In- Indians to a 7-7 tie. On Saturday, the Yorkers were dians led 40:3' Four of SIX East York fum- . . . . ‘ fortunate tO-escape Wlth thelr hides mtaCt‘ hips were recovered hv a ï¬ght- Indians Star 40 -3 Win "'In Essentials Unity; in Non-Essentials Liberty: in all things Charity†junior squad‘ lost l'v to Pick- erinlg. Despite enjoying a mark- ed edge in play the Hill team just couldn‘t ï¬nd any kind of opening in the Pickering goal. The R‘H'HKS girls are off to a great star-t this fall. Let’s hope they keep it up. October 10 the speedball team was led to a 10-2 win against Bayview girls by captain Dawn Kingsley and co~captain Rosemary Ross. The two teams meet once again 0c- tober 18 at Richmond Hill. 50 ‘good luck girls and keep up the ltremendous school spirit. tosh dropped back to kick. A bad. paSS from centre sailed over his head and he was forced to chase the ball deep into his own territory. East York defenders came charging in to capitalize on a big break. A-n aroused Indian team block- ed like savages and strewed the ï¬eld with would-be tack- lers. McIntosh was able to romp the distance through the entire team for the major score. Once again the converâ€" sion attempt was not good and the Indians led 14-3 at three quarter time. Early in the fourth quarter a reverse to Bob Sheridan from the Indian 30 yard line saw the shifty Sheridan streak 80 yards for another touchdown. Once again no convert. Mo- ments later the same play from the East York 30 yard line saw John Morgan go into pay dirt territory and the Indian lead in- crease to 26-3. A forty yard touchdown pass from Dunn to McIntosh and a convert by McIntosh rain the score to 33-3 as a stunned East York team reeled under the on-‘ LIBERAL CLASSIFIEDS-Get Resulfs-TU.4-IIOS V8, automatic transmission, radio, power steering, power brakes, tur- quoise with black top, 19,000 original miles. 6 cylinder, standard transmission, with radio. Original brown ï¬nish, spotless throughout. Reï¬nished in Olive Green metallic with red leatherette interior. One owner. LOWEST PRICES IN METRO R'. D. LITTLE 8. SON ’60 Ford Convertible ’60 Chevrolet, Tudor ’59 Vauxhall Victor, DeLuxe 285-1105 Richmond Hill PA. 7-5001 “Metro’s Oldest Ford Dealer†RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1962 Above Cars All Carry Our One-Year G and W Warranty Daily Bag limit is three phea- sannlts - not more than one of which may be a hen. Hunters harvesting pheasant-s in this area which have been leg banded are asked (although not required) to submit a re- port to the local conservation office, or the district office, De- partment of Lands and Forests. RR. 2 Malplr Information in the report should include the number of hours hunted, number of phea- sants shot and sex, number of pheasants seen and sex, band numbers, and whether or not dogs were used. Hunters licensed i_n Markham Towns'hip'h-ave been issued a questionnaire which they must complete and return. Hunting is permitted from 8 am. to 5 pm. Regulations make hunting of pheasants with a rifle illegal. Department of Lands and Forests officials are trying to obtain the number of days hunted, the number of pheas- ants bagged and leg band n‘um- Local hunters are reminded of special regulations regard- ing the pheasant hunting sea- son, which opened Wednesday and closes October 27 in York County. hers Pheasant Season Will End Oct. 27; In York County: Four of six East York fum- bles were recovered by a ï¬ght- ing Indian defensive unit. Rei- mer. McIntosh and Morgan came up with stellar perform- ances but the whole team was really up for this game. On October 27 at 2 pm. the Indians go up against their arch rivals, North- western Ghosts at Rich- mond Hill. First place in the league standings will be squarely on the line and both clubs will give their all in this one. The game will be played at the Town Park in Richmond Hill. $2095 $1645 $895 RICHMOND HEIGHTS CENTRE - TU. 4-4401 Oscar Kinzler, president of Professional Bowling Services Ltd., 360 Enford Rd, Richmond Hill, is seen presenting an engraved bowling pin to Bob Anderson for chalking up a perfect game at a Toronto alley recently. Pins used in Bob’s 450 game were manufactured by the company. The star bowler also received a cheque from Mr. Kinzler. The Rivalda AM-PVI Stereo console is made to Clairtone’s exacting standards especially for Firestone. This moderately priced console is a perfect mating of sensitively balanced components with a sound co-ordinated, taste- fully styled, oiled walnut cabinet. A pre- cision Garrard 4-speed stereo changer and diamond tip cartridge handles your treasured CLAIRTONE OPEN TILL 9 PM. DAILY â€" SAT. TM 6 PM. Receives Pin For Perfect Game BEAUTIFULLY BUILT... for music lovers, home decorators and budgeteers WT SINCE 1878 SINGLE COPY 10c See and hear it today atâ€" "V! IN RICHVALE? Then you'll enjoy reading all about the News In Richvale by Mrs. Anne Hewitt YOU'lL FIND IT ON PAGE 15 records with care. Four, balanced Jensen speakers and a powerful 15 watt ampliï¬er reproduce sound with the depth and clarity of sets costing far more. The Rivalda’s 12- tube performance is intended to sell at $359.95. Through a special purchase, for a limited time you can enjoy $ magniï¬cent sound for only I {mi/711 fl"â€" . (STAFF PHOTO) ‘2 Coaches Must ’Rebuild “Squirts†\For Coming Year King City scored an 8-3 vic- tory over Maple October 3 to win the best of seven ï¬nals for the Senior Girls’ Softball Cham- pionship, four games to three. Ma‘ple had won the fifth game of the series Oct. 1, 18-6, Members of the Maple team were Irene Bryson. Phyllis Jul- ian, Karen Coward, Freda, Joan. Members of the Maple team were Irene Bryson. Phyllis Jul- ian, Karen Coward, Freda, Joan. Donna and Ann Constable, Bar- bara Cook, Judy Maddin, and Joyce Foster. Thirteen of the 14 players that made up last year‘s team have outgrown the squirt age group and are now peewees. Coaches Brown and Brookes re- place 1961-62 Coach Earl Methe. Only player returning from last year’s team is Paul Brown. Ed Brown and Ray Brookes are giving last year's top play- ers from the squirt league a trial and have already held three practices. The Sing Alongs play every Friday night against similar teams from the North York and Metro area. Peewee and ban- tam all-stars also play Friday night at Richmond Hill Arena. First game starts at seven and admission is only 25 cents. Wins Championship With 8 - 3 Victory Coaches were Doug Blce and Reg Thacker Jr. Coaches Ed Brown and Ray Brookes of the CFGM Sing Alongs face a complete face- lifting operation as they try to rebuild the team that won the squirt championship last year in the North York League. CFGM Sing Alongs are an all- star team. made up of the best players from Richmond Hill‘s 12-team squirt league.