Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 14 Jan 1965, p. 10

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Langstaff fell victims to three Thornhiu basketball teams last week. Thomhfll midgets won 49-12, the juniors won 67-‘ 81 as Tom Minett scored 33 points. in the senior game Thornth won 71-29 as Dale Crouter dropped in 38 points. BAYVIEW SECONDARY Bayview basketball teams are‘ marking time with exhibition games while waiting for the‘ regular schedule to roll around; Bayview seniors won against Woodbridge but the intermedi~ ate squad lost their exhibition tilt _sgainst Woodbridge. The‘gym and wrestling teams are working out hard in prep nation for the upcoming Georgian Bay championship meets. 10 RICHMOND HILL HIGH Richmond Hill juniors lost a‘ 31-21 decision to Markham jun: ior hoopsters as Mike Hiscott scored nine for the green and white school. Tony Thomson sank five straight free throw as Rich- by all! (Continued from page 9) who, and the other marked “gentlemen” for the simon pure amateurs. And yet they went. out and played the same game!!! And no one discounted the runs scored by any of the professionals! The attitude in England has changed a great deal since World War II. Stanley Matthews, pos- sibly the greatest professional soccer player the world has ever seen is now Sir Stanley Matthews. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth on the last day of 1964. That's how much the British attitude has changed. He was preceded in the knighthood game by Sir Gordon Richardsâ€"unquestioned peer of British jockeys. Whether you play a game for money and call yourself a professional or whether you play equally well and use your fame to aid a business endeavour, what is the real difference? As long as you play by the rules and conduct yourself in a manner characteristic or worthy of a sport then, by definition you’re a sportsman and the game you play can be called a “sport” without any doubt! Will you buy that much, Miss Mac- kenzie??? MINOR HOCKEY WEEK IN CANADA Minor Hockey Week in Canada starts January 23. Over 171,000 boys from Newfoundland to British Columbia are playing organized minor hockey and all of them come under the guidance of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association. It’s a good cause but one of the blurbs put out by the CAHA committee amused us just a wee bit. The article said that CAI-IA hopes to ' develop more and better hockey players for Can- adian representative teams and for the higher ranks of hockey. Does this-mean we’ll be sup- plying players to the Russians?? ’ Seriously, though, this minor hockey week» does deserve all our support. During this week our Rich- mond Hill Hockey Association, the Maple Hockey Association and many other groups will get a little more recognition than they get during the rest of the year. Devoted men and women coach, super- vise, drive, plan events and schedules and do the thousand and one things necessary to the running of a successful minor hockey league. The biggest job of all is the raising of the necessary cash to make it all possible and maybe this is the way we can all help the best. Plan to attend some of the special events and even the occasional regular game. your support definitely will be appreciated h TKORNHILL SECONDARY .. . Sport 3pm . . . 355 Yonge St. North SENIOR HOCKEY WIMBRIDGE CLEAN ERS LTD. COURTESY CARS AVAILABLE If you prefer Quality 2y Cleaning call BUDGET TERMS Wilson-Niblett Motors Ltd. Auto Body Repair THE BEST COSTS NO MORE ONLY SOLDER USED Tuesday, Jan. 19 8.15 11.111. Thomhill VS. North York Toronto Tildens ‘. Hill Arena THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Thursday VS. Newmarket Adults 50c Richmond Hill, Ontario mond H111 intermediates edged Markham 39-38 after two over- time periods. Regulation time saw the score locked at 35-35, 37-37 after the first overtime period and then the 39-38 win ‘in the second overtime period ‘ Richmond Hill seniors won‘ 64-49 as Sid Acton scored 28 points and Art Archibald 25 points for the Winners. Archi- bald scored only two points in the first half then picked up 23 more in a wild second half. 3 Wrestling concluded the pro- ‘gram. Dave Olsen won the 98 lb. idass for Richmond Hill, Ken Hitchin won the 106 lb. group as Lindsay won the 115 lb. event. Dave McLean of Markham won 1the 123 11). event, Loftus of \Richmond Hill won the 130 lb. go and Rich Bowden of Mark ‘ham was the 141 1!). winner. Bruno Artenasl and Gundy of Markham fought to a draw in the 148 1b. group and Gary Thompson of Markham was the 157 1b. winner. Mike Lelshman and Dave Thompson of Rich- mond H111 won the 168 and 1831 lb. events respectively. Dex-elm Wigby of Markham won the heavyweight division. Rich- mond H111 won the meet 42-20. After the events ended, Rich-‘ mond Hill, Markham and East York entered into a series of informal bouts refereed by an intercollegiate wrestling cham- plon. New holds and tech- niques were taught as the bouts were mainly used as training sessions. This Friday night. Langstaff,1 will visit Richmond Hill for a junior and senior basketball game. The senior girls will play against the teachers and a dance will follow all the rest of the action. HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS AV. 5-5435 1' Sr. Hockey League 1 Standings Bob‘s Boys 2 I Gormley S&G 0 ‘ Clyde McDuff and Bruce} Newland fired home the goals for the winners. . Barrow’s Insurance 3 Charlton Hardware 0 ‘ Goal scorers for the winners‘ Were Gary Levesque, Davei Cooney and Bill Dyer. with Rich Standing and Terry Nelson be- ing awarded assists. Skyline Pontiac 2 Markham Paving 1 Skyline squeaked out a win when Steve Sexton and Craig Purdie both scored and Tom Hester got an assist. Gerry Dickie scored the lone goal for Markham. Standinnâ€" TYRES Bob’s Boys Charlton Skyline Barrow‘s . Markham . ‘Gormley | ATOMS Leading Scorersâ€" _ Matt Kinnari, Richmond Hill . . . . . . Earl Cairns, Willowdale . . . . . . . . .. Gary Stamp. Thornhill . . . . . . . . . . . . Doug McInnis. Richmond Hill .. . . . Wally Stothers. Willowdale . . . . . . . . Charlie Leeming, Bradford . . . . . . . . Jim Wells. Richmond Hill . . . . . . . . Future Latest Resultsâ€" Newmarket 5 V5. Richmond Hill 3; Downsview 9 vs. North York 4: Bradford 7 vs. Thornhill 5; Keswick 7 vs. New- Teamsâ€" Willowdale Rangers . . . . . Richmond Hill Dynes . .. Keswick Comets . . . . . . . Downsview Flyers . . . . . Bradford Bells . . . . . . . . . Thomhill Shamrocks Newmarket Cubs . . . . . . . Toronto Tildens . . . , . . . North York Black Hawks Sheppard G: Gill 4 Hillsdale Heating 2 Donnie Hillaby, Mike Ball, Robbie Sackville and Doug' ‘Webster each contributed a gosh to the S&G victory and Web ‘ster added two assists. Larry ‘Laldman and Roger Crook were the marksmen for the losers with assists from Andrew Peden and Crook. Deciantis & Rice 9 Pinewood Aggregate 3 . Ron McBrien, with three goals, was scoring leader for D&R. Team mates Glen Sharp and John Stokes added two each and Craig MacKenzie a single~ ton. McBrien also gained two assists and Ken Chirrel and Wesley Berseth got an assist. Rob Clephan, Don McKenna and Peter Thomson each scored lonce for Pinewood, with Tom Schell, Thomson and Robbie Hargreaves picking up assists. Gunnar’s Tailoring 2 Young’s BA 2 Names of those who scored for Gunnar’s are not available, but Bill Gurney and Teddy Red- elmeier garnered a goal apiece for Young’s. Assists came from Bill Cox and John D’Alessandrn. Consumers Gas 3 Wilson-Nlblett 1 Dave McDonald, Roger Crane and Wib Lamb rapped in the puck for the winners with one assist from Jack Mesley. Dan Lewin scored for the losers. Sunnybrook Riding Club 2 Rumble Transport 1 ; Peter Evans scored unassisted ‘ for the riders. and he and Kevin YEdwards assisted Paul Banks on the second goal. Dan's Esso 5 Allencourt Pharmacy 1 Dan's rolled to a win on a‘ ifive goal scoring splurge. Ken Babey got two of these and‘ Hugh Cutler, Ross Cameron and Michael Graydon accounted for [one each. Cutler also picked up; [two assist points. Michael Halli 1scored for Allencourt on a pass Jfrom Bruce Hipklss. -NWWWW~ : l “:3. ucwul yiuncu uy all. GBBIBL paint as did Mike Stoddart with two, Brian Swindlehurst, Murray Nook, Scott Seltzer. George McMullen and Barnie Corless. * if it t MIDGEYI‘S Little’s z Bowden’s 1 Lorne Faulkner was assisted by Danny Phillips and R. Mc- Brien by Archie Nesbitt on the winner's two goals. Richard Burton scored unassisted for the losers. Thermos 4 Del Brocco 3 Steve Black netted two goals and Dave Broderick and Larry Shier one each for Thermos. They were assisted by Jim Em: anuel (2), Black (2) and Brod- erick. Nelson Lund popped the puck in the net for two of the laser‘s goals and Barry Clatten- burg came up with a single score. all unassisted SQUIRTS Jan Jan Jan Jam Hill Jan. 19. 9.45 p.m.â€"Toronto vs. Newmarket at Richmond Hill market 3 ‘ Richmond mu 7 ‘ Service GENERAL CONTRACTORS ‘ Maple 1 Rick Richard, assisted by STEEL BUILDINGS OF ALL Bernie Jenkins, saved Maple from a whitewash as Richmond TYPES Hill went on a scoring spree; To Custom Dino Tsmonis contributed a‘ P‘ hat tr'ck a d William McVennl ' . ' RE AIRS AND and Pgul Fgrraro sharpened the SpeCIflcatlons ALTERATIONS . .m t , g m h t Bu ifmgld £111?» 53% 3;. 2 OtOHObee Phone AV. 5-5881 sisted on three goals and may-1 BA. 1-3344 ton Chapman. Terry Stewart; WW3“ Paul Ferraro on one each-W Deciantis - Rice lwvmgz‘ GENERAL CONTRACTORS .' ° ', Jan. 14, 1965 Gamesâ€" Arena 13, 9 p.m.~â€"Newmarket vs. Downsview at Bradford 14, 8.15 p.m.â€"Keswick vs. Richmond Hill at Sutton 17. 9.30 p.m.â€"â€"North York vs. Keswick at Don Mills 19. 8.15 p.m.â€"-â€"Thornhill vs. North York at Richmond Standing as of January 9 T Pts.‘ 3 19 3 17 3 15‘ IPEE WEES Irv Minor Hocke y Result: Street Construction 1 Shields Footwear 1 As the score indicates, these teams Were evenly matched. J m Campbell scored for Street, assisted by Mike Evans, and Nigel Shelton scored for Shields, assisted by John Town- mend. Irving Fuels 8 I Coughlin Fuels 2 J All the winner's goal: came; from Stacey Richards’ stick. He! was assisted on all three by‘ Glen Rogers with Glen Davey. Robert O’Toole and Donnie‘ Rice each assisting on one 2031; Richard Kimball and Tony Bel- lavance came through with goals for Coughlln with Larry Partington and Randy Parker assisting. Tony's Essa 4 ‘ Eric’s Cycle & Sports 1 ‘ Tony’s marksman, Ted Coop-i er. Jim Hornett, Don Deben- ham, Jim Fitzpatrick each con-r tributed a goal to this decisive victory. Hornett, Bill Hogan, Jim Turner and Jim Moorley picked up assist points. Mich- ael Card got the lone counter ‘for Eric‘s. BAN TAMS Skyline Pontiac 5 Surf Marine 2 Jim Hamilton paced Skyline‘s attack when he scored unassist- ed and got another tally on a‘ pass from Ian Finnerty. LarryYoung, Brian Oliver and Fin- nerty also contributed a goal to the victory and Jim Olsen. 01- iver and Bruce Watier were credited with assists. Chris Dun» lop came through with a goal for Surf Marine on a pass from Brian Rushlow and Barry Sims, and Les Robichard added an- oither on a pass from Mike Car- t er. Butler Baird 7 Cralgle’s Men’s Wear 5 George Porter was best for the winners as he netted two goals. Paul Burton, Bill Nelson, Rich Chapman, Brian Ruttle and Don Hewitt each garnered‘ singletons for B&B. Burton,1 Nelson. Ruttle, Graham Palmer, John McLaughlin and Frank Petronski were active in the as-1 sist department. Bill Wright, Gary Lewin, Scott Seltzer. De- rek Andrews and Steve McGill shared scoring honors for Craig- ies. Lewin picked up an assist paint as did Mike Stoddart with two, Brian Swindlehurst. Murray Nook, Scott Seltzer. George McMullen and Barnie Corless. Bowden’s 1 Lorne Faulkner was assisted by Danny Phillips and R. Mc- Brien by Archie Nesbitt on the winner's two goals. Richard Burton scored unassisted for the losers. By Bob Ross Jr. Goals 12 15 14 12 Assists 18 11 12 16 13 12 Pts. 30 26 26 23 22. 21 21 For Azst. Pts. 80 43 17 64 2'7 17 56 38 13 40 52 10 57 57 9 50 59 9 49 7'7 8 25 42 6 48 '14 5 ALLENCOURT MEN’S Richardson at 251. Tim Saull MAJORS [checked in at 249. George Ker- The big shooters to amt off off 241 and Henry Knuckey has the New Year were Les Chid- 247. ley 864 (301), Scott Parke 832 * * * * (319), Bob Weeks 822 (301). EASTSIDERS Dave Alexander 807 and Jack The second series ended in a Stanway 803 (330). The_ single garrison finish last week. Cardi- game scores had Jim Davidson nals and Orioles both grabbed 342. Bill Jackson 331. Dan 30er off seven points from the tapi 1328‘ Jim McMahon 327. Larry two teams leaving the Senators; IBishop 320 and Ted Robertson and Cardinals tied with 33 \304. points each. The Senators won Maple Snack Service and Turnbull Grocery took all 7 points from ABC. Bowl and Bob’s Delivery Service. Wim- brid-ge Cleaners, Richmond Hill Auto Wreckers and Allencourt Lanes got 5 from Manufactur- ers Life. Lake Simcoe Fuel Oil and Central Van & Storage. Tom Hughes Shell got the ex- tra point in a 4 to 3 win from Richmond Inn Restaurant. The high average race finds} Al Richardson and Bob Ken“1 nedy tied at 262. Scott Parkel 259. Bill Jones 251 and Jiml Davidson 250 are the other topl shooters. League Standings As of January 8 Wimbridge Cleaners 26, Turnbull Grocery 24, Maple Snack Service 24, Manufactur- ers Life 22, Tom Hughes Shell 22. Richmond Hill Auto Wreck- ers 20, Richmond Inn Restaur- ant 18, Lake Simcoe Fuel Oil 16, Allencourt Lanes 14, Bob’s Delivery Service 12, Central Van & Storage 10 and ABC. Bowl 2. ABC MAJORS Bruce Murray, out for the first time this year. led all bowlers with an 836 triple. Bruce bad games of 294, 286, and 246‘ He was the only one to hit 800 this week as the pins were really stubborn. Mel Larocque was second with a 792, followed by Tim Saul 791, Bill Hutchinson 770. Jim Trenowden 753 and A) Fairthorn 751. In team action three teamsl took all seven points. F. Pow- ell beat Hall’s Fuel Oil, Dynes Jewellers defeated Michael’s‘ Gift Shop and ABC 2 whipped} John’s Boys. Tony’s Esso Ser- vice took five off ABC 1, A&W gained five from Richmond Inn. Odeon Bowl shaved Harris & Day 43 and Baker‘s took the same count from Allencourt. Team standings for the first night of the second series were: Dynes Jewellers 7, F. Powell Fencing 7, ABC 2, 7. Tony’s Es- so Service 5, A&W 5, Odeon Bowl 4, Baker’s White Rose 4, Harris & Day 3. Allencourt Lanes 3, ABC 1, 2, Richmond Inn 2. John‘s Boys 0, Michael’s Gifts 0. Hall’s Fuel Oil 0. There will be no gates in the fence being erected by the parks board between the central town park and prop, erties on Roseview Avenue. This was the decision of Richmond Hill Council last week when it considered a motion by Councillor Will- iam Lazenby that the parks board's decision not to per- mit gates be overruled. Coimcillor Lazenby repor- ted he had received two re- quests for gates from prop- No Gates In New Fence On The EASTSIDERS The second series ended in a garrison finish last week. Cardi- nals and Orioles both grabbed off seven points from the tap two teams leaving the Senators; and Cardinals tied with 33 points each. The Senators won the top spot by virtue of a greater pinfall. with the Cardi- nals taking second place. Third place went to the Dodgers. They Were tied with the Orioles, each having 32 points. but once again the higher pinfail gave the Dodgers the higher placing. Betty McMeeking led the lad? ies with a score of 745 (292) fol- lowed by Ethel McRae 712 (305), Ruth Norman 676 (239), Ruth Lang 670 (243) and Ev. Jones 643 (229). Top men were John Allen 929 (378), John O'Connor 805 (313). Bill Jones 785 (345), Mike Parrett 727 (304) and Rene Beland 654 (229). High single games were bowl-(i ed by Heather Tomlin 262, Janet ‘ Fleming 245‘ Helen Storey andl Judy Hewitt 230, Patricia Jones 220, Shirley Greer 215, Sadie‘ Brent 212, June Amos 210. Jean Logan 203, Ellen Parrett 202' and Muriel Steven 200. Ken} Clubine rolled a 295 single” Charles Ingles 241. Neil Jarvle 240. Sterling Reid 231 and Dick Logan 228‘ Hawks And Owls Winter In Area Officials of the Department‘fl of Lands and Forests at Maple‘ report that many hawks and owls paused along Lake Ontario and in parts of York County during their southern migra- tion. This area has long been. a congregating centre and many species were observed daily. soaring low on the hunt for small game and rodents or‘ perching in large trees to rest. Although most eventually pro- ceeded further south, there are always some hardy birds which remain in the vicinity as long as temperature and snow depth does not inconvenience them. The Great Horned Owl is in his element and is joined, dur- ing the winter visitation, by the large Snowy Owl. to the town's specifications and the responsibility'of po- licing traffic through them would be borne by the prop- erty owners involved. erty owners on the street and there was a possibility of more applicants. The ex- pense of gates to be built The old fence, which was described by Councillor Wal- ter Scudds as a hodge-podge of various types of fencing which has fallen into dis- repair. is presently being Lanes removed and will be replac- ed by a chain link fence on town property. erected by the town. Councillor Scudds report- ed the parks board had con- sidered the question of gates and had decided against them. Asked by council about the number of com- plaints from the area, Chief R. P. Robbins reported they are numerous. concerning youngsters retrieving balls, but whether these young- sters used existing gates or climbed over the fence he had no way of knowing. Deputy-reeve Floyd Per- kins stated "As an old farm-‘: er, I have found where you‘ put in gates you WeakenI your fence. You might as well not have a fence as‘ have one with gates in it." The deputy-reeve also noted that on fair day and similar occasions when admission to} the grounds is charged spec-‘ tators could go in and out by these gates and it would be very difficult to policeg them. Answering a question by‘ Councillor Eric Handbury as‘ to what hardship would be involved if no gates Were allowed. Councillor Lazen- by reported residents of Roseview would have to go around by way of Roseview Avenue and Church Street. Councillor Lois Hancey re- quested that a member of the parks board contact the applicants for gates and ex-; plain to them why the board had decided not to allow any. Councillor Scudds said that one applicant was a member of the parks board and already knew the board‘s reasons UUTHAM’S NUWBLUWERS MES ERVIBE SPECIAL p; ‘ MES 1747 KEELE $1., TORTO R0. 24332 Demonstrations Arranged Now Is 'I' he Time To Buy A D d bl Reggfigitiiloneed Our Stock Is High! Prices Are Down! 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