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NIAGARA FAILS GAZETTE 07 Wednesday, February 15, 19«I * Niagara Falls Flyers Winging Way Toumrd OtlA jJunior A Title ByMIKESHV^tV BARRING A COMPLETE collapse the Niagara Falls, Ont.jTlyers appear on tta way to winning their first Ontario, Hockey Association Junior A cham- pionship, since the team was trans- ferred from Barrie a few years back. ' ••% . ' _; Under the expert tutelage of owner-coach Leighton (Hap) Emms and his assistant Bill Long, the Flyers improved rapidly this sea- son and have been "the hottest team ii^, the league dw*ihg v the ; past two*months. H';~v< ' *, The Flyers no longer resemble the'team,; which back in Decern- ;• SHAW ber^ wajs battling' to stay abtfte the .500 mark. On Deq.. ; 12-Coach Emms' squad was entrenched in third place tykh ah 8-7-4 record, Since then the Flyers have won'18^, lost 4 and tied one—an amazing record for any h'ockey (earn; amateur or professional. Niagara Falls currently has a 26-11-5 mark and leads its ^nearest pursuer, the Montreal Junior Ca- nadiens, by eight points. The lead may not seem like much what with three weeks of play remaining, oh the" schedule, but if the Flyers can play .500 hockey from here on in, the championship should be theirs. The club has eight games remaining, one less, than Montreal. Four are at home against .. GrUelph, . Montreal and St. ; . Catharines twice. The, road'games are against Hamilton,. KTirnt're a 1, St. Caiiarines and' Peterboro. MphtreaV pri. the other iiindy has; only three games on f foreign ice -and six at Irortf^., &t first . glance it would\s«em the Junior. Cari- adiens have a ' slight edge in the!' schedule. However, keep in mind that six are with M r s t division clubs. Two of the other three games are against St Cath- arines, a to^gh. nut fpr-the Canadiens to crack this sea- ; who will deny this is the mark of a championship team. Friday night's game at Memorial Arena should go a long way toward deciding the eventual winner., It will be the third game, in three night? for the - Canad-ieris, but one they will;need des- perately *if they hope to overhaul the Flyers. •* •. *" LYNN. PATRICK, general 'manager of the Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League, was ah in- terested spectator at a re- cent Niagara Falls-Guelph game in the Royals arena, son as evidenced-by ias.t^lepstars Jeannot Gilbert and Sunday's game between tfre -Billy Nibbs as' two of the two clubs. ThevCanadiens- were on top 4-1' and 6-3 before the Black Hawks roared back to gain a 6-all tie. Four of the Flyers' re- maining eight contests are against Guelph and St. Catharines teams they have beaten with regulari- ty this season. So, ai far as the schedule/ is concerned neither t e a m appears to have a decided advantage. * » ; ' THE FLYERS canffot af- ford to become complacent despite t h e i r , eight point lead, but must continue playing the brand of hockey that has made them the. clr-, cult's top team during "re- cent m o .n t h s. Victories against such teams as Monr treal and Beterbpro on for- eign ice have given^them a reputation for being a clutch outfit" Twice during the last three weeks, Niagara Falls has shut out the Petes at home and there is no one most promising yd u n g- hockey p 1 a y e rslhi:, the- Bruins' organization. Both are playing with Kingston of "the Eastern Professional League and as of last week Gilbert was leading the circuit in scor- ing with 68 points on 28 goals and 40 assists. fWO OTHER former Fly- er players have also been performing well with their respective teams. Howie Deitrich, a 1961-62 favorite is playing with the Clinton Comets of the Eastern Ama- teur League. Wayne\ Rutledge, the Fly- ers' goaltender of last sea- son is playing for.Windsor in the Senior "A" Ontario Hockey Association! , Gary Dornhoefer^ the Flyers' fine winger is ex- pected to begin skating within two weeks. He has been.out of action with a knee injury, but should re- turn in time for the Me- morial Cup playoffs." e Victory , ByROB WEBBER Gaxtttt Sporti Writer x Tom Nocera, Trott Vocational^ quarterback on the pourt, played his finest game for the Engineers Tuesday night. ' The 5-9 red-head and back court teammate Frank Starks combined for 46 points to outscore the entire Tonawan- da team in their Niagara Frontier League first-place battle before a near-capacity crowd of 1,500 in the neutral LaSalle gym. Trott's 5645 victory moved the defending, champion Eb gineers into undisputed firsfc place.with a ljt-1 record and five 'games- left.' Tonawanda is'now second" with an 11-2 record,, both losses to' Trott Career High , Nocera netted his. career high of 2i points while Starks, the leading SFLscorer, main- tained his average.with, a 25- pdint effort He now has 336 points In 13 games.- "It was our best game of the year and a fine team, ef- fort," Trott Coach Matt Maz- za said after the' game. "No- cera maiie the difference. We obtained a pair of special ankle weights last week. No- cera were them all day and hescored 21 points* Last Fri- day, Jim Powell- had worn them and he scored 24 points at Lockpprt" ' Nocera made nine of> 16 field goal attempts Tuesday, seven for seven^in' the sec- ond half. Trott wiped out a 21-19 halftime lead With a seven-point string at the out- set of the third period. : Open Up Middle "Our strategy, was to open up, the,middle so that Nocera could drive or'pas's off to our big men," Mazza/explained. Nocera made five baskets He singled oufforaer. Flyf4(0thethird period, three on drives .right up the middle Nocera had Trott's last eight points of the quarter to cap the Engineers' 18-li rally. It opened a 37-32 lead after three periods. Tenacious Tonawanda held a slight edge during the; first half after breaking a 5-5 tie. Rick Cassata; wht) was high for the Warriors with 16 points, and brother Joe Cas; sata Were hitting,consistently from -.outside the Trott de f^nse. < -• ; "It's a swing defense," Maz- za said. We're in a zone when they have th'e ball in ther cor- ner but go man-f or-man when the ball is out front." > • Rebound . Basket Jim Rlngler, Tonawanda's £6 center, rebounded his ; own missed shot for a basket that gave the Warriors a 21-17 lead before Starks' jumper with 21 seconds left ended the first half scoring. '."Trott took charge Immedi- ately upon the resumption of play. Starks scored on a lay- up after Trott controlled Hhe tip-off. Tom King made one free throw to break the.21-21 tie. Starks drove for a basket. Nocera tallied on a lay-up after Jim Cheeley stole the ball. Tonawanda came back on baskets .by. Rlngler. and Rick. Cassata to trail 26-25. Rlngler hooked in a rebound to leave the Warriors one point behind again a little later 28-27. Nocera Takes Charge Nocera- then took charge. He drove the middle for a! basket'and turned it. into a three-pointer when he was fouled by Jim Haas, It was the latter's fourth personal. Nocera then flung a set and Trott led 33-27-with 2:51 left in the third period. Nocera added two more baskets, both on neat .drives up the middle. Trott held a five-point lead after three periods 37-32. Starks again scored on a tip-off play to open the fourth quarter. Cheeley tallied twice on lay-ups and Trott opened EYES THE BASKET-rFrank Starks (40) a 43-34 difference with over 0 f Trott Vocational eyes the basket six minutes left. L A J • *. Tonawanda again cut its ? S he V**™* J? dr ' ve a 9 a '™* deficit. to : five points 43-38. ,-Tpnawahaa in first-place game Rick 'Rowley tallied a baske. * %~—^ ^ : '.Celtic Five Tops Lakers; Nats Beaten By The Associated Press The fur seems to fly when-. ever the Boston Celtics and the Los Angeles Lakers get together in the National Bas- ketball Association. Right now they are battling for the $2,000 that goes to the team finishing the regu- lar season with the highest winning percentage. The Cel- tics, who took the bonus last season, walloped .the Lakers 120-93 Tuesday night and re- duced the Lakers' percentage lead. Boston, the Eastern Di. vision leader, now has a 44- 18 record for .710: Los An- geles, No. 1 in the Western Division, has 46-15 for .754. A record crowd of 11,028 saw the game at Cobo Hall in Detroit. The Detroit Pis. tons defeated the San Fran- cisco Warriors 120-115 in the nightcap. The St. Louis Hawks end- ed Syracuse's five-game win- ning streak 128-100 in the other NBA game scheduled Tuesday. SYRACU5E ST. LOUIS Tuesday, night on LaSalle court. Tonawanda players are Jim Ring- ler {45) and Rick Cassata (21). Trott won 56-45.—Gazette Photo. and then stole the ball and fed Rick Cassata. But the tir- ing Warriors never gqt. any closer as the -Engineers out- scored them 13-7 in the re- maining time; Trott . easily overcame a press with some full-court passing. Starks had seven of . the last 13 Trott points, Courtside Slants — Trott shot 47 percent for the game, 25 for 57' after a torrid 17 for 27: second half . .-•. Starks made 12 of 25 field goal at- tempts . . . Starks was hon- ored at the Niagara Commu- nity Center •" dinner Tuesday night at the Hotel Niagara, but because of the basketball game couldn't.appear in per- son to receive the Levy Bros, sports award , . *> Starks led the Trott rebounding with 11 and Jim Powell added nine ;.. .Trott.will have a "breith- )r" Friday at winless, Lewis- totfPprtei* before playing its postponed ,-jjame with Niag- ara Fallsi. next 'Tuesday night . ... Trott won the junior var- sity game 5541 over the Tona- wanda jayvees . . . Cozell Fer- rers 14. points led three Jun- ior Engineers, in double fig. iires. '"•" ;";.•••'-•-'. NORTH TONAWANDA—Tt begins to look more and more as if Lewiston Porter Central High School is going to set a record in reverse in the Niag- >ort Flashbadks TEN YEARS AGO .TO-" DAY—Esther Blessing high- lights keglfhg action in the Crystal Ladies League with A 244 single and 640 triple. * * * TWENTY YEARS AGO T O D A Y—Niagara defeats Colgate 54-52 in overtime battle despite the loss of leading scorer Fred Schwab, out of action with an ankle injury. THIRTY Y E A R S AGO TODAY S a c r e d Heart Church wins the YMCA's annual indoor track meet for the third year In suc- cesaipn 40-21. : v' V ara Frontier Basketball Lea- gue this season. The Lancers lost.their 14th straight game here Tuesday night to North Tonawanda and are accorded little chance of winning any Qf tKeir four regaining starts this season. "iv is''a season that will have to be chalked up tcv experi- ence by he'w 1 s10ni^orter, which never wasin the game as the Lumberjacks -piled up a 6842 verdict MV>el>.rHas 13 Junior and sophomores did most of the. scoring, for the visitors In the contest at North Tonawanda High School's gym. Sophomore Gary Moeller had 13, Junior Bill Doyle netted 12'arid jun- ior i Mark Fresichlag had V 6 points. Kurt Hollasch, NT's 6-4 sen- ior scoring whiz, counted 16 points to run his season total to 263 and to maintain a pace of 20 points a game. NT Coach George Bancroft substituted freely as the Lumberjacks, ran up a 40-20 halftime lead. Nt:*-6 senior Richard Kijowski tach had 9 points foe North Tona- wanda, which made its season record 8-6. The North Tonawanda Jay- vees halted a two-game Lew- istpn-Porter winning istreak In the preliminary .game, crushing the baby ^Lancers 59-28. VARSITY i; UWIST6N-PORT, NO. TONAWANDA Dcyl» - Fulkrton Frtbcbbv YaW - ' Sutherland Pedltv . H«lm Kllkrur J4quttt« Junior-^ary Westphal and Hp&S^'^? u I G 6 4 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 F T 0 12 Kllowskl 5 13 AnastMl 0 <Tor*ckl 4 Zayah 6 Hollasch 0Wn<Phal OCarr 0 Broch«y 0 L«wl« 0 Octk<rtnk\ 0 Hudson D«$»ult»l O 4 1 2 3 5 4 3 1 3 0 0 0 F T 1 9 0 2 0 4 4 10 6 16 1 9 1 7 1 5 0 6 l°0 0 0 TROTT Byrd r ' King " BOOM Powell Bradberfy Nocera Hasley Starks Cheeley G 0 0 0 1 0 9 0 12 3 TONAWANDA F T 0 OR,Cassata 1 IHaes 1 > Hurst- ».: O 2 Rlngler 0 0 Rowfey 3 21 J. Cassata 0 QBroeckef 1 25 0 6 FT 0 16 1 7 0 2 1 7 1 S 0 8 0 0 Tom Randier Stars For Falls in 71 - 5.7 Victory Totals 25 6 56' Totals 21 3 45 TfpH 7 12 18 19—56 Tonawanda .,.: .... 11 .10 11 13—45 Offtclais^Ed MellerskI, Al Huetter. ' TROTT JV WHItems Alexander Ferrell Will HoHoroan •.-. Mauldln. Rlchma»>d.- AAcCIJntocK TONAWANDA JV G F T 1 3 5 LoeswkH 4 4 12 HamoWnd 4 * . 145he'rn»n,. O. 1.-1.Small .• i : 0 . 2 Bakef 00 -OSlater' 2 .0, 4Mafl«fls 0 0 OHarpster Wak»» . O.'.O O.Kefler Cook Sn%Mh S3 13NedoV 2 0 . 4 GgWer .'• Gross -•'•., Dlermyer Gallagher : -• Zlehm -* Root G 6 0 O 3 2 0 I 2 O 0 1 o: 0 1 2 0 F T 0 12 0 0 Totals Trott JV .... Tonawanda JV 1917-55: Ttals .:.7 13 ...8 15 18 5 41 22 13—5$ 8 lOr^l Totals 16 10 42 TfttMt LiW.-Port. .,, 7 13 11 ho. Tonawanda . 1 7 23 14 » * • JAYVKES UtWIITONPORT. NO. TONAWANDA 27 14 68 11-42 4—«8 R. Hewitt »P«clc S $«iblll« Bray' LauTonh Knetoel McAMIIen i, H«wltf Clark Oedsofl G 4 2 2 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 8 Plorkowskl 4 Bancroft 4 Kostowikl 5 Smith 1 Otvjtn 2 Lukai 2Hir*tll 2 Burwst OMtoner* 0 O 0 FT 4 14 1 1 1 7 0 4 2 16 0 6 1 3 0 2 2 6 Totals 13 2 28 Totals 9 II 54 11 59 7-28 21—59 IT TAKESi SPECIALIST TO SERVICE YOUR CRAKES to. I^&tm:m$m,. Bolero Is Wjrinjf^ ' NASSAU, Bahamas OB—The swift-California ySwl Bolero battlea" h e*a v y winds and pounding wayes for an over- all victory in the . 184-mile Miami « Nassau' yacht race Tuesday. ''•?•%:•"„. ,: ••• •'{'•. Read the Want Ads LaSalle Plays East Tomght LaSalle and Kenmore East will play a Niagara Frontier League basketball game at La- Salle tonight. The junior var- sity preliminary starts 1 at 7 p.m. Host LaSalle will be fav- ored to even It's season record .at.7-7 although Kenmore East (4T9) has, been playing good ball of late. The Explorers are led by Wayne Powless, the No. 4 scorer in the NFL with 230 points in 13 games. Reid GTrefe is. the l e a d i n g East scorer with 209 points. . Tonawanda Mermen Win Tonawanda beat Kenmore Eas,t 54-41 In a Niagara Fron- tier. League swimming meet Tuesday night. .Kerry O'Hara of East swam the 100 yard but-, terfly in 55.3 seconds. Gary Martin of Niagara Falls had set a NFL and state record of 55 seconds last Friday at Lock- port. Kenmore West is at Lock- port tonight and East at North Tonawanda Thursday. On Fri- day, Lewiston-Porter is at La- Salle and Niagara-Wheatfield at Lackawanna. Scores 51-27 Win First Presbyterian .whipped Pierce Avenue UP 51-27 in the Junior Division of the Protes- tant Inter-Church Basketball League Tuesday night 'fit North Junior. PIERCE AVE. \)P Special to The Gazette KENMORE-^Substitute Tom Randier came through with. 18 points and Niagara Falls clicked-in the second half for a 71-57 Niagara Frontier League basketball vic- tory over Kenmore West here Tuesday. Randier only played about* ~— Blanchl CbappeJI Costello Gemtx* Greer K«T Neumann Schayes Scbtfitr Wwfter War ley Totals Syracuse St. Louis G F 5 3 5 0 4 1 4 2 4 2 5 3 5 3 2 3 0 1 2 0 5 0 T 13 Barnhlll lOBeary 9 Bridges 10 OuHy 10 Farmer 13 Haean 13 Jordan 7 Perm 1 SauWsb'ry 4 Bauvrin lOWllkens •fl 1« 100 Totals ...... ...1« 27 25 ...37 41 27 Attendance—5435 LOS ANGELES Barnett Baylor Ellis Hundley Krebs Lafiusso Selvy Wiley G F 2 4 1i2ll 0 6 3 2 2 1 6 8 4 3 0 0 BOSTON T 8Cousy 35 HavHcek 6 Helnsohn 8 K. Jones 5 S. Jones 20Loscutoff 11 Love41ette O Ramsey - Russell Sanders G P T 7 7 16 3 0 6 5 2 1? 3 2 8 6 4 16 13 8 34 0 0 0 3 1 7 3 0 6 2 4 8 4 7 15 49 30128 30—100 20—ilW G P T 7 0 14 8 0 16 9 3 21 2 0 4 11 3 25 1 0 2 3 1 7 3 6 1(2 8 1 17 10 2 Totals 29 35 93 Totals 5314 ISO Los Anseles .15 18 39 21—93' Boston ........ ; ..^0 t 34 37 29—120 SAN FRANCISCO DETROIT G F T G F T Attles 5 0 10 DeBussc'r* 7 2 16 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN G F T half the game but the 6-5 junior transfer from Bishop Duffy was one of four Catar- acts in double figures. He made eight of 12 shots from the floor. Randier entered midway in the second period after Jessie Jefferson , picked up three personal fouls. Randier again took over in the third period when Jefferson collected his: fourth personal. Hayes High John Hayes was high for the Falls with 19 points, Roh Nabors had 13 and Jimmy Williams' 10. The win made the fourth-place Cataracts* record 94. They trail Lacka- wanna by a halfrgame in their battle for third place and the final Section < VL pJayoff berth. Poor ball handling by the Falls and a 26-polnt second period by • Kenmore West gave the host Blue Devils a 36-30 lead at the half. "We didn't really begin to jell until the third period," NFHS Coach Jim O'Shea said. Williams' seven points paced the Cataracts in a 23-13 third quarter and to a 5349 lead.- Craig Johnson kept Ken West close by scoring 11 of his 27 points in the third period. The Cataracts then cement- ed the victory with an 18-8 last period. Randier con- tributed three baskets. Shoot 57 Per Cent The Falls statistician tab- bed the Cataracts at 58 per cent from the field, 31 of 54. Hayes made nine of 15 and Homer Pelts Smith Camp man Stone Vlgue Griffin Martin 0 4Touoh«>tt« 0 6 Gnaroan 0 OCooley 1 1 Kay 4 8 McRaV 4 12 Blaln 0 2 Rennit 4 18 Totals 19 13 51 Ttals G ,0 0 4 3 0 0 1 8 11 27 Nabors six of 10. Nabors had 11 rebounds. Rein Valdov, Ken West starter, suffered an ankle injury the first quarter and will be sidelined indefinitely. , Jack Kemp refereed the junior_ varsity game and .then filled in for 'the varsity game when Al Arfco was the only official to show up. The once-beaten N i a g a r a Falls junior varsity won its 12th game 59^52 over the Keri West jayvees. Bill Duff and Rich Wright each netted 18 points for the first-place Baby Cataracts. NIAGARA FALLS KENMORE WEST FT 1 ' Hayes Randier Hartmans Nabors Jefferson Finger' Rader. WIHiams Lczina Gavazzf G 9 1 19 Valdov 8 2 18 Johnson 0 OZentz 1 13 Hennessy 0 4 Gross 1 5 Daoust 0 2 4 10 0 0 0 0 G 0 11 1 3 2 5 F T 0 0 5 27 1 3 2 8 4 8 1 11 CbambYn 20 6 45 Dukes Hfonfower 5 2 M Ferry 1 1 3 Howell 4 4 12 Jones 3 0 6 Louanery 9 2- 20More4and 2 1 50hl 0 1 1 Scott Lee Mesehery Naulls Phillips Rodsers Sears 1 0 2 14 1 29 6 7 19 2 2 6 8 0 6 O i l 10 4 24 7 3 17 Totals 49 17 10(5 Totals 50 20 120 San Francisco ....X 34 23 30—115 Det«>» .91 30 31 28—120 1st Methodist Wins First Methodist, paced by Gary Kirkpatrick led all the way and easily defeated St Paul's 46-18 in a Protestant Inter-Church Midget Division game Tuesday. 1st METHODIST ST. PAUL'S OFT O F T Maslem 8 0 16 Kick 2 4 # Atklmai 4 0 8 Palmer 4 0 8 Klrkp'rlck 11 0 22Sharpf 1 0 2 Lally o 0 0 Palmer 0 0 0 Oane 0 0 0 Fanntna 0 0 0 Watson 0 0 0 Lester 0 0 0 Totals 23 0 46 Totals ~7 ~4 7* Totals 31 9 71 Totals 22 13 57 Niagara Falls .13 17 23 18—71 Kenmore West 10 26 13 8—57 Officials—Al Arlco, Jack Kemp. NIAG. FALLS JV KEN. WEST JV Holody Wilson Walos Duff Ao^mshlck Wrlsht Bettlno Leardln i McCoy I Thompson Stephens Grad F T 0 2 Hasan 0 0 Borka 0 4DIPrlest 4 18Bouohton 0 8 Applebaum 8 18Ha9el9ansz 0 0 Dykman 0 0 Reid 0 0 Allen 3 7 Brandys 2 2 Wilson 0 OMaronn G F T 2 0 4 0 0 0 1 2 4 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 16 5 1 11 3 9 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 2' 17 59 Totals 19 14 52 Nlaoara Falls JV ..17 17 13 12—59 Kenmore West JV ..15 10 Hi 14—52 Return Engagement Cornell will return to Le- high's football schedule next year. They last met in 1959. mm (LONG lift Rivmv K*# Brake htttjIUtUftt ItwItHfei i fnttalUtkm by BRAKE SPfCIALISn * iMcoodltlooal Guarantee (Itfalmf all •sMrUtrmerrt 4 *C>**n, Inspect it Adjustment 4 Wh**' V* ClMrt, lr*t*ct wheel •k Inspect Mester Cylinder mfo. deftcrt) OTiAHC •* ChecK all Great* t**l* - Rotate t l r e i - f r M DHvi In anytime. No money down* thkfgt or bvdffti. 95 INSTALLED fORO All ©theft tIMS CMIV. t««g« t Hudson, IWM, ;$$£*" tni 4r Wfceel AU t »i»«*t |l.tt Meet «e*t FREE INSTALLATION—SPRINGS fr SHOCKS W l IXTIMD CRIDIT TO HOlDtM Of MAJOR CMDIT CAftDt ANB CHARCI P1ATU temACAlU FAi.UH-2^16 MNI AVE. ne*r Hy^ hrk ^50 5-84H DAY SAVERS SWEAT SHIRTS 1.00 SPORT SHIRTS IONO ...].00 WHITE SOCKS 5 *. 1.00 CANYAS GLOVES 4 PT. 1.00 ZIPPER ARTICS 2.95 THERMAL SOCKS - 3 ». 1.00 NEW SHOE DEPARTMENT CONTINENTAL STYLES h«w smts DIS^MlCEi gjVJj __ %9? BUKKETS .;-. 2,98 RUGGED DRESS 0 O C J.flRST SLACKS ... £JjJ QUALITY ASSbRTED Ijlij-- « AA W0OIH WWbtii mG. 6.95 V«VV imNK^R JACKETS •,.,,.. 5.00 DISCOUNT CENTER 'AIIWY.NAVY STORE . — 160 TWiRO St. — BU 2-2368 i OPEN DAILY 9 to 6 THURS. 'TIL 9 JM ANNUAL i S^ $ BEVERLY UNES STANDINGS FEB. 13 F^28 Shipping R«t)fltrs F-28 Etectrlc Shop Operation* Plant Eng. Benzol Cell Room WORK SHOE ISCOUN' The Fun Show - Coming Soon! Sat. Mar. 2 thru Sun. Mar; 10 2:00 P.M. TO 10:30 P.M. DAILY MASTEN AVE. ARMORY Deposit Free You Don't Have To Be Present To Win FREE! $3500.00 In Prizes Three Dr«wlnft Deity 4 P.M. . I P.M. • 10 P.M. Coupon al Molten Ave. Armory during the iKow Free entry coupons ovollofele now ot oil plates Utted below: * ALL TEXACO & SUNOCO STATIONS LOCKPORT C Wm. Crhwell, 141 Pine St. NIACARA FALLS letelle Merlne Mert, 770) Buffele Are. NUf»fi tftflne Center, 21)5 Con- necting Blvd. NUiet* Fells Merin« Seles, »11 Cerfer Ave. NORTH TONAWANDA Blue Dolphin Merlne, 178 River Rd. Rlcherd Hoover Merlne, 7)07 Beer Rlgde Rd. Nlcere Perk Merlne Corp., 1000 River Rd. Norton Auto e> Merlne, 82 Webster St. TONAWANDA B b C Cemplng Trelters, 161 S. NUfere St. Smith Beyi ln«., SO Fillmore Ave. HOOKER INTER-DEPT. "B" DIV. 58 n Yard iOVi 54W Pby. Ch. Ub 40. 51 Industrial Ret. 39V4 AtVi Sales & Devel. 94 43VJ WeWlns S*v 2 - »Vi 46 Research Glrle 32 44V* Purchasing OOM 43 ^Corros^n U b . 29 SAM PAUL MAJOR "A" W L W L Maoaddlno 4>\ 25 Simon Pur* 33 33 Cacllnas 40 26CJIunl BkJrs. 32 34 BthM. R. 3SW-27W Bavarian 3m-04'^ Mil-Pine 37 290d'«nio's 91%-M 1 /* Rays 3*W«9V* Slenk H>atlnfl 29 37 Falls Wd. 33V2-30U! Ttxsmpson Rf. 26 40 Storteh'se 35WO0V^ State Parm I. 25 41 Steve's M. 33Vi.32V! GIrasole 22W-43V* * t * FELICE SPORTSMAN W L W L DeFranco 58^-29' a Talarlco 45 43 Cor*in( 56 32 Vacca 38'.i-49^ Lindsay 54W"33'^ Aroato 35 53 Utlca C k * 51 -37 MirabelII 34^-53^ SoeotrvA. 49VJ-38 ,< ? Dimino 30tt,57>^ Aotrwny's 45 43Hl7hland 30 58 . • * BEVERLY TUESDAY MIXED W L W L S'dao 61 23 LaSalle Cab 43 41 Johnson 53 26 LaOvce 43 41 Swiery's 55VJ-28 ,, I Yaseen 37'.'»-4o^ Cas«1es 55 29 Skoll-Massaro 27 &i Sh*rl*sn 53 31 No. 10 11 7J Nlaa. Tree 31 , .'»-32 1 i * • NIAGARA MOHAWK POWER CORP. W L W L Hot Sticks 45 21 Drivers 31 34 Llr* 34 OOThtrdSt. 29 37 Volts 35':-r> ,/ j Service C«nter M 38 Meters 3< 1 ^-?ia , i Operators 25 41 « • • OOODYEAR INTERDEPARTMENT W L W L Assortments 65 19Teylor 27 37 Bombers 42 30 Maintenance 32 48 Comets 36 28 Mavericks 23 57 Barrlneau 36 32 • * HOOKER INTERDEPTMENT "A" W W Stores 53 Area 3 Repelr 39 Admin 52 Gr. Is. R. M. 39 Org. Phos. R. 2 49 Scale SN» 38 Mach. Shoo 1 4? Welding Shop 1 38 Boiler House 45 M*»on Shoo 38 F'ne Chem 44'> Inst. Repair 36'* F-28 Repairs 44'^ Oro. P. R. J 33V» Trichior 43'j Ret. Repelr 33 . t TUESDAY LADIES W L W L Gllllem Gulf 51 33 Mll-Plne Apts 43 4! Henvwod 4<> 3% Mllfvllle 41 4J Schrtck 47 37Wedoe 39^44'* Pal Dillon 45 38 Fo*e Jewell 34 50 D*hfberg 45 39 Thrlftwey 33'.SWS Reed f. Son's f> *' 8l»-k's Gulf 32 52 » » « TUESDAY A.M. LADIES W L W L Three Aces 17 , *6''} Chanel B. 12 12 Ivy Leaguers 16 8 Hot Shots B'.^ISW Helms 1/ ir<3 r-t < JU « * BOWLINO BELLES W L W L Plantation 45 21 HI. Floor 78^37'V L«S*lle P*H 43 23 Maoeddlnos 26 40 Nlaoara F.B. 43 23 C. 8. Buter* 34 42 AlclKfi 31 W" •'•rys 23 43 e LADIES INDUSTRIAL W L W L Greet Lakes 51 ISMoore Buflelo 33 33 Hooker 48 ISMoore HI 2 27 39 Kimberly 45 21 I. G. E. 25 41 Moore Mil 42"»23'^ Nebtsco 24 39 DuPont 39 27 Eleh. AA 23^42\* Carborundum 35 3' Sponsored by Marine Tredet AssoxleNon Western New York, Inc. NIAOARA FRONTIER C.C. Aces Birdies Spoons Drivers Stymies Booevs Pers LeSalle C Rockets 7 Up W L W L 34">22\'i Chip Shots 28 29 34\>22V> Divots 28 29 33 24 Deuces A 26 31 33 24 WeOsei * 25 32 29'/i27^ Hmrdi 24'/>32'^ 28W28Vi Putters 23V»33^ 28 29 Eagles .23 34 BLACK HORSE W L- - W-L 53V>30Vi Eiffel T. 43^40^ 49 35 Macks P. 40V*43V* 46 38 Five Dots 19V464V* " L sj Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

Niagara Falls NY Gazette 1963 Feb

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Page 1: Niagara Falls NY Gazette 1963 Feb

NIAGARA FAILS GAZETTE 0 7 Wednesday, February 15, 1 9 « I * •

Niagara Falls Flyers Winging Way Toumrd OtlA j Junior A Title

ByMIKESHV^tV •

BARRING A COMPLETE collapse the Niagara Falls, Ont.jTlyers appear on tta way to winning their first Ontario, Hockey Association Junior A cham­pionship, since the team was trans­ferred from Barrie a few years back. ' ••% .'_;

Under the expert tutelage of owner-coach Leighton (Hap) Emms and his assistant Bill Long, the Flyers improved rapidly this sea­son and have been "the hottest team ii , the league dw*ihgv the ; past two*months. • H';~v< '*,

The Flyers no longer resemble the'team,; which back in Decern- ;• SHAW ber wajs battling' to stay abtfte the .500 mark. On Deq..;12-Coach Emms' squad was entrenched in third place tykh ah 8-7-4 record, Since then the Flyers have won'18 , lost 4 and tied one—an amazing record for any h'ockey (earn; amateur or• professional.

Niagara Falls currently has a 26-11-5 mark and leads its ^nearest pursuer, the Montreal Junior Ca­nadiens, by eight points. The lead may not seem like much what with three weeks of play remaining, oh the" schedule, but if the Flyers can play .500 hockey from here on in, the championship should be theirs.

The club has eight games remaining, one less, than Montreal. Four are at home against .. GrUelph, . Montreal and St.;. Catharines twice. The, road'games are against • Hamilton,. KTirnt're a 1, St. Caiiarines and' Peterboro.

MphtreaV pri. the o t h e r iiindy has; only three games on f foreign ice -and six at Irortf^., &t first . glance it would\s«em the Junior. Cari-adiens have a ' slight edge in the!' schedule. However, keep in mind that six are with M r s t division clubs. Two of the other t h r e e games are against S t Cath­arines, a to^gh. nut fpr-the Canadiens to crack this sea-;

who will deny this is the m a r k of a championship team.

Friday night's game at Memorial Arena should go a long way toward deciding the eventual winner., It will be the third game, in three night? for the - Canad-ieris, but one they will;need des­perately *if they hope to overhaul the Flyers.

•* • . * "

LYNN. PATRICK, general ' m a n a g e r of the Boston B r u i n s of the National Hockey League, was ah in­terested spectator at a re­cent Niagara Falls-Guelph game in the Royals arena,

son as evidenced-by ias.t^lepstars Jeannot Gilbert and Sunday's game between tfre -Billy Nibbs as' two of the two clubs.

ThevCanadiens- were on top 4-1' and 6-3 before the Black Hawks roared back to gain a 6-all tie.

Four of the Flyers' re­maining eight contests are a g a i n s t Guelph and St. Catharines — teams they have beaten with regulari­ty this season. So, ai far as the schedule/ is concerned neither t e a m appears to have a decided advantage.

* • » ; • ' •

THE FLYERS canffot af­ford to become complacent despite t h e i r , eight point l e a d , but must continue playing the brand of hockey that has made them the. clr-, cult's top team during "re­cent m o .n t h s. Victories against such teams as Monr treal and Beterbpro on for­eign ice have given^them a r e p u t a t i o n for being a clutch outfit"

T w i c e during the last three weeks, Niagara Falls has shut out the Petes at home and there is no one

most promising yd u n g-hockey p 1 a y e rsl• hi:, the-Bruins' organization.

B o t h are playing with Kingston of " t h e Eastern Professional League and as of last week Gilbert was leading the circuit in scor­ing with 68 points on 28 goals and 40 assists.

fWO OTHER former Fly­er players have also been performing well with their respective t e a m s . Howie Deitrich, a 1961-62 favorite is playing with the Clinton Comets of the Eastern Ama­teur League.

Wayne\ Rutledge, the Fly­ers' goaltender of last sea­son is playing for.Windsor in the Senior "A" Ontario Hockey Association! ,

G a r y Dornhoefer^ t h e Flyers' fine winger is ex­p e c t e d to begin skating within two weeks. He has been.out of action with a knee injury, but should re­turn in time for the Me­morial Cup playoffs."

e Victory , ByROB WEBBER Gaxtttt Sporti Writer

x Tom Nocera, Trott Vocational^ quarterback on the pourt, played his finest game for the Engineers Tuesday night. '

The 5-9 red-head and back court teammate Frank Starks combined for 46 points to outscore the entire Tonawan­da team in their Niagara Frontier League first-place battle before a near-capacity crowd of 1,500 in the neutral LaSalle gym.

Trott's 5645 victory moved the defending, champion E b gineers into undisputed firsfc place.with a ljt-1 record and five 'games- left.' Tonawanda is'now second" with an 11-2 record,, both losses to' Trott Career High ,

Nocera netted his. career high of 2i points while Starks, the leading SFLscorer, main­tained his average.with, a 25-pdint effort He now has 336 points In 13 games.-

"It was our best game of the year and a fine team, ef­fort," Trott Coach Matt Maz-za said after the' game. "No­cera maiie the difference. We obtained a pair of special ankle weights last week. No­cera were them all day and hescored 21 points* Last Fri­day, Jim Powell- had worn them and he scored 24 points at Lockpprt" '

Nocera made nine of> 16 field goal attempts Tuesday, seven for seven^in' the sec­ond half. Trott wiped out a 21-19 halftime lead With a seven-point string at the out­set of the third period. : Open Up Middle

"Our strategy, was to open up, the,middle so that Nocera could drive or'pas's off to our big men," Mazza/explained.

Nocera made five baskets He singled oufforaer. F lyf4(0 the th i rd period, three on

drives .right up the middle Nocera had Trott's last eight points of the quarter to cap the Engineers' 18-li rally. It opened a 37-32 lead after three periods.

Tenacious Tonawanda held a slight edge during the; first half after breaking a 5-5 tie. Rick Cassata; wht) was high for the Warriors with 16 points, and brother Joe Cas; sata Were hitting,consistently from -.outside the Trott de f^nse. < -• ;

"It's a swing defense," Maz-za said. We're in a zone when they have th'e ball in ther cor­ner but go man-f or-man when the ball is out front." > • Rebound . Basket

Jim Rlngler, Tonawanda's £6 center, rebounded his; own missed shot for a basket that gave the Warriors a 21-17 lead before Starks' jumper with 21 seconds left ended the first half scoring. '."Trott took charge Immedi­ately upon the resumption of play. Starks scored on a lay-up after Trott controlled Hhe tip-off. Tom King made one free throw to break the.21-21 tie. Starks drove for a basket.

Nocera tallied on a lay-up after Jim Cheeley stole the ball.

Tonawanda came back on baskets .by. Rlngler. and Rick. Cassata to trail 26-25. Rlngler hooked in a rebound to leave the Warriors one point behind again a little later 28-27. Nocera Takes Charge

Nocera- then took charge. He drove the middle for a! basket'and turned it. into a three-pointer when he was fouled by Jim Haas, It was the latter's fourth personal. Nocera then flung a set and Trott led 33-27-with 2:51 left in the third period.

Nocera added two more baskets, both on neat .drives up the middle. Trott held a five-point lead after three periods 37-32.

Starks again scored on a tip-off play to open the fourth quarter. Cheeley tallied twice on lay-ups and Trott opened EYES THE BASKET-rFrank Starks (40) a 43-34 difference with over 0 f Trott Vocational eyes the baske t six minutes left. L A J • • *.

Tonawanda again cut its ? S h e V**™* J? d r ' v e a 9 a ' ™ * deficit. to: five points 43-38. ,-Tpnawahaa in first-place game Rick 'Rowley tallied a baske. * %—~—^ ^ : '.—

Celtic Five Tops Lakers; Nats Beaten

By The Associated Press The fur seems to fly when-.

ever the Boston Celtics and the Los Angeles Lakers get together in the National Bas­ketball Association.

Right now they are battling for the $2,000 that goes to the team finishing the regu­lar season with the highest winning percentage. The Cel­tics, who took the bonus last season, walloped .the Lakers 120-93 Tuesday night and re­duced the Lakers' percentage lead. Boston, the Eastern Di. vision leader, now has a 44-18 record for .710: Los An­geles, No. 1 in the Western Division, has 46-15 for .754.

A record crowd of 11,028 saw the game at Cobo Hall in Detroit. The Detroit Pis. tons defeated the San Fran­cisco Warriors 120-115 in the nightcap.

The St. Louis Hawks end­ed Syracuse's five-game win­ning streak 128-100 in the other NBA game scheduled Tuesday. SYRACU5E ST. LOUIS

Tuesday, night on LaSalle court. Tonawanda players are Jim Ring-ler {45) and Rick Cassata (21). Trott won 56-45.—Gazette Photo.

and then stole the ball and fed Rick Cassata. But the tir­ing Warriors never gqt. any closer as the -Engineers out-scored them 13-7 in the re­maining time; Trott . easily overcame a press with some full-court passing. Starks had seven of . the last 13 Trott points,

Courtside Slants — • Trott shot 47 percent for the game, 25 for 57' after a torrid 17 for 27: second half . .-•. Starks made 12 of 25 field goal at­tempts . . . Starks was hon­ored at the Niagara Commu­nity Center •" dinner Tuesday night at the Hotel Niagara, but because of the basketball game couldn't.appear in per­son to receive the Levy Bros, sports award , . *> Starks led the Trott rebounding with 11 and Jim Powell added nine ;.. .Trott.will have a "breith-) r" Friday at • winless, Lewis-totfPprtei* before playing its postponed ,-jjame with Niag­ara Fallsi. next 'Tuesday night . ... Trott won the junior var­sity game 5541 over the Tona­wanda jayvees . . . Cozell Fer­r e r s 14. points led three Jun­ior Engineers, in double fig. i ires . '"•" ;";.•••'-•-'.

NORTH TONAWANDA—Tt begins to look more and more as if Lewiston Porter Central High School is going to set a record in reverse in the Niag-

>ort Flashbadks TEN YEARS AGO .TO-"

DAY—Esther Blessing high­lights keglfhg action in the Crystal Ladies League with A 244 single and 640 triple.

* * * TWENTY YEARS AGO

T O D A Y—Niagara defeats Colgate 54-52 in overtime battle despite the loss of leading scorer Fred Schwab, out of action with an ankle injury.

• • • THIRTY Y E A R S AGO

TODAY — S a c r e d Heart Church wins the YMCA's annual indoor track meet for the third year In suc-cesaipn 40-21. : v' V

ara Frontier Basketball Lea­gue this season.

The Lancers lost.their 14th straight game here Tuesday night to North Tonawanda and are accorded little chance of winning any Qf tKeir four regaining starts this season. "iv is''a season that will have to be chalked up tcv experi­ence by he'w 1 s10ni^orter, which never wasin the game as the Lumberjacks -piled up a 6842 verdict MV>el>.rHas 13

Junior and sophomores did most of the. scoring, for the visitors In the contest at North T o n a w a n d a High S c h o o l ' s gym. Sophomore Gary Moeller had 13, Junior Bill Doyle netted 12'arid jun­ior i Mark Fresichlag had V 6 points.

Kurt Hollasch, NT's 6-4 sen­ior scoring whiz, counted 16 points to run his season total to 263 and to maintain a pace of 20 points a game. NT Coach George Bancroft substituted freely as the Lumberjacks, ran up a 40-20 halftime lead. Nt:*-6

senior Richard Kijowski tach had 9 points foe North Tona­wanda, which made its season record 8-6.

The North Tonawanda Jay-vees halted a two-game Lew-istpn-Porter winning istreak In the preliminary .game, crushing the baby ^Lancers 59-28.

VARSITY i ; U W I S T 6 N - P O R T , NO. TONAWANDA

Dcyl» -

Fulkrton

Frtbcbbv YaW - ' Sutherland Pedltv . H«lm Kllkrur J4quttt«

Junior-^ary Westphal and Hp&S^'^? u I

G 6 4 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0

F T 0 12 Kllowskl 5 13 AnastMl 0 <Tor*ckl

4 Zayah 6 Hollasch 0Wn<Phal OCarr 0 Broch«y 0 L«wl« 0 Octk<rtnk\ 0 Hudson

D«$»ult»l

O 4 1 2 3 5 4 3 1 3 0 0 0

F T 1 9 0 2 0 4 4 10 6 16 1 9 1 7 1 5 0 6

l ° 0 0 0

TROTT

Byrd r ' King " BOOM Powell Bradberfy Nocera Hasley Starks Cheeley

G 0 0 0 1 0 9 0

12 3

TONAWANDA F T 0 OR,Cassata 1 IHaes 1 > Hurst- ».: O 2 Rlngler 0 0 Rowfey 3 21 J. Cassata 0 QBroeckef 1 25 0 6

F T 0 16 1 7 0 2 1 7 1 S 0 8 0 0

Tom Randier Stars For Falls in 71 - 5.7 Victory

Totals 25 6 56 ' Totals 21 3 45

TfpH 7 12 18 19—56 Tonawanda . , . : . . . . 1 1 .10 11 13—45

Offtclais^Ed MellerskI, Al Huetter. '

TROTT JV

WHItems Alexander Ferrell Will HoHoroan •.-. Mauldln. Rlchma»>d.-AAcCIJntocK

TONAWANDA JV G F T 1 3 5 LoeswkH 4 4 12 HamoWnd 4 * . 145he'rn»n,. O. 1.-1.Small . • i : 0 . 2 Bakef 0 0 -OSlater' 2 . 0 , 4Mafl«fls 0 0 OHarpster

Wak»» . O.'.O O.Kefler Cook Sn%Mh

S 3 13NedoV 2 0 . 4 GgWer

.'• Gross -•'•., Dlermyer

Gallagher : -• Zlehm

-* Root

G 6 0 O 3 2 0 I 2 O 0 1 o: 0 1 2 0

F T 0 12 0 0

Totals

Trott JV . . . . Tonawanda JV

1 9 1 7 - 5 5 : Ttals .:.7 13 . . . 8 15

18 5 41 22 13—5$ 8 lOr^l

Totals 16 10 42 TfttMt LiW.-Port. . , , 7 13 11 ho. Tonawanda . 1 7 23 14 » * •

JAYVKES U t W I I T O N P O R T . NO. TONAWANDA

27 14 68 1 1 - 4 2 4—«8

R. Hewitt »P«clc S $«iblll« Bray' LauTonh Knetoel McAMIIen

i, H«wltf Clark Oedsofl

G 4 2 2 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0

8 Plorkowskl 4 Bancroft 4 Kostowikl 5 Smith 1 Otvjtn 2 Lukai 2Hir*t l l 2 Burwst OMtoner* 0 O 0

F T 4 14 1 1 1 7 0 4 2 16 0 6 1 3 0 2 2 6

Totals 13 2 28 Totals 9

I I

54 11 59 7 -28

21—59

IT TAKESi SPECIALIST TO SERVICE YOUR CRAKES to. I^&tm:m$m,.

Bolero Is Wjrinjf^ ' NASSAU, Bahamas OB—The

swift-California ySwl Bolero battlea" • h e*a v y winds and pounding wayes for an over­all victory in the . 184-mile Miami « Nassau' yacht race T u e s d a y . ''•?•%:•"„. , : ••• •'{'•.

Read the Want Ads

LaSalle Plays East Tomght

LaSalle and Kenmore East will play a Niagara Frontier League basketball game at La­Salle tonight. The junior var­sity preliminary starts1 at 7 p.m.

Host LaSalle will be fav­ored to even It's season record .at.7-7 although Kenmore East (4T9) has, been playing good ball of late. The Explorers are led by Wayne Powless, the No. 4 scorer in the NFL with 230 points in 13 games. Reid GTrefe is. the l e a d i n g East scorer with 209 points. .

Tonawanda Mermen Win

Tonawanda beat Kenmore Eas,t 54-41 In a Niagara Fron­tier. League swimming meet Tuesday night. .Kerry O'Hara of East swam the 100 yard but-, terfly in 55.3 seconds. Gary Martin of Niagara Falls had set a NFL and state record of 55 seconds last Friday at Lock-port.

Kenmore West is at Lock-port tonight and East at North Tonawanda Thursday. On Fri­day, Lewiston-Porter is at La­Salle and Niagara-Wheatfield at Lackawanna.

Scores 51-27 Win First Presbyterian .whipped

Pierce Avenue UP 51-27 in the Junior Division of the Protes­tant Inter-Church Basketball League Tuesday night 'fit North Junior.

PIERCE AVE. \)P

Special to The Gazette

KENMORE-^Substitute Tom Randier came through with. 18 points and Niagara Falls clicked-in the second half for a 71-57 Niagara Frontier League basketball vic­tory over Kenmore West here Tuesday.

Randier only played about* ~ —

Blanchl CbappeJI Costello Gemtx* Greer K«T Neumann Schayes Scbtfitr Wwfter War ley

Totals Syracuse St. Louis

G F 5 3 5 0 4 1 4 2 4 2 5 3 5 3 2 3 0 1 2 0 5 0

T 13 Barnhlll lOBeary 9 Bridges

10 OuHy 10 Farmer 13 Haean 13 Jordan 7 Perm 1 SauWsb'ry 4 Bauvrin

lOWllkens

•fl 1« 100 Totals . . . . . . . . .1« 27 25

. . .37 41 27 Attendance—5435

LOS ANGELES

Barnett Baylor Ellis Hundley Krebs Lafiusso Selvy Wiley

G F 2 4

1i2ll 0 6 3 2 2 1 6 8 4 3 0 0

BOSTON T 8Cousy

35 HavHcek 6 Helnsohn 8 K. Jones 5 S. Jones

20Loscutoff 11 Love41ette O Ramsey -

Russell Sanders

G P T 7 7 16 3 0 6 5 2 1? 3 2 8 6 4 16

13 8 34 0 0 0 3 1 7 3 0 6 2 4 8 4 7 15

49 30128 30—100 20—ilW

G P T 7 0 14 8 0 16 9 3 21 2 0 4

11 3 25 1 0 2 3 1 7 3 6 1(2 8 1 17 1 0 2

Totals 29 35 93 Totals 5314 ISO Los Anseles .15 18 39 21—93' Boston . . . . . . . . ; . . ^ 0 t 3 4 37 29—120

SAN FRANCISCO DETROIT G F T G F T

Attles 5 0 10 DeBussc'r* 7 2 16

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN

G F T

half the game but the 6-5 junior transfer from Bishop Duffy was one of four Catar­acts in double figures. He made eight of 12 shots from the floor.

Randier entered midway in the second period after Jessie Jefferson , picked up three personal fouls. Randier again took over in the third period when Jefferson collected his: fourth personal. Hayes High

John Hayes was high for the Falls with 19 points, Roh Nabors had 13 and Jimmy Williams' 10. The win made the fourth-place Cataracts* record 94. They trail Lacka­wanna by a halfrgame in their battle for third place and the final Section < VL pJayoff berth.

Poor ball handling by the Falls and a 26-polnt second period by • Kenmore West gave the host Blue Devils a 36-30 lead at the half.

"We didn't really begin to jell until the third period," NFHS Coach Jim O'Shea said. Williams' seven points paced the Cataracts in a 23-13 third quarter and to a 5349 lead.- Craig Johnson kept Ken West close by scoring 11 of his 27 points in the third period.

The Cataracts then cement­ed the victory with an 18-8 last period. Randier con­tributed three baskets. Shoot 57 Per Cent

The Falls statistician tab­bed the Cataracts at 58 per cent from the field, 31 of 54. Hayes made nine of 15 and

Homer Pelts Smith Camp man Stone Vlgue Griffin Martin

0 4Touoh«>tt« 0 6 Gnaroan 0 OCooley 1 1 Kay 4 8 McRaV 4 12 Blaln 0 2 Rennit 4 18

Totals 19 13 51 Ttals

G ,0 0 4 3 0 0 1

8 11 27

Nabors six of 10. Nabors had 11 rebounds.

Rein Valdov, Ken West starter, suffered an ankle injury the first quarter and will be sidelined indefinitely. , Jack Kemp refereed the junior_ varsity game and .then filled in for 'the varsity game when Al Arfco was the only official to show up. The once-beaten N i a g a r a Falls junior varsity won its 12th game 59 52 over the Keri West jayvees. Bill Duff and Rich Wright each netted 18 points for the first-place Baby Cataracts. NIAGARA FALLS KENMORE WEST

F T 1 ' Hayes Randier Hartmans Nabors Jefferson Finger' Rader. WIHiams Lczina Gavazzf

G 9 1 19 Valdov 8 2 18 Johnson

0 OZentz 1 13 Hennessy 0 4 Gross 1 5 Daoust 0 2 4 10 0 0 0 0

G 0

11 1 3 2 5

F T 0 0 5 27 1 3 2 8 4 8 1 11

CbambYn 20 6 45 Dukes Hfonfower 5 2 M Ferry

1 1 3 Howell 4 4 12 Jones 3 0 6 Louanery 9 2- 20More4and 2 1 50hl 0 1 1 Scott

Lee Mesehery Naulls Phillips Rodsers Sears

1 0 2 14 1 29 6 7 19 2 2 6 8 0 6 O i l

10 4 24 7 3 17

Totals 49 17 10(5 Totals 50 20 120 San Francisco ....X 34 23 30—115 Det«>» .91 30 31 28—120

1st Methodist Wins First Methodist, paced by

Gary Kirkpatrick led all the way and easily defeated S t Paul's 46-18 in a Protestant Inter-Church Midget Division game Tuesday. 1st METHODIST ST. PAUL'S

O F T O F T Maslem 8 0 16 Kick 2 4 # A t k l m a i 4 0 8 Palmer 4 0 8 Klrkp'rlck 11 0 22Sharpf 1 0 2 Lally o 0 0 Palmer 0 0 0 Oane 0 0 0 Fanntna 0 0 0

Watson 0 0 0 Lester 0 0 0

Totals 23 0 46 Totals ~7 ~4 7 *

Totals 31 9 71 Totals 22 13 57 Niagara Falls .13 17 23 18—71 Kenmore West 10 26 13 8—57

Officials—Al Arlco, Jack Kemp. • • • NIAG. FALLS JV KEN. WEST JV

Holody Wilson Walos Duff Ao^mshlck Wrlsht Bettlno Leardln i McCoy I Thompson Stephens Grad

F T 0 2 Hasan 0 0 Borka 0 4DIPrlest 4 18Bouohton 0 8 Applebaum 8 18Ha9el9ansz 0 0 Dykman 0 0 Reid • 0 0 Allen 3 7 Brandys 2 2 Wilson 0 OMaronn

G F T 2 0 4 0 0 0 1 2 4 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 16 5 1 11 3 9 15 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals 2' 17 59 Totals 19 14 52 Nlaoara Falls JV . .17 17 13 12—59 Kenmore West JV . .15 10 Hi 14—52

Return Engagement Cornell will return to Le­

high's football schedule next year. They last met in 1959.

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W L W L Gllllem Gulf 51 33 Mll-Plne Apts 43 4! Henvwod 4<> 3% Mllfvllle 41 4J Schrtck 47 37Wedoe 3 9 ^ 4 4 ' * Pal Dillon 45 38 Fo*e Jewel l 34 50 D*hfberg 45 39 Thrlftwey 33'.SWS Reed f. Son's f> *' 8l»-k's Gulf 32 52 » » «

TUESDAY A.M. LADIES W L W L

Three Aces 17,*6''} Chanel B. 12 12 Ivy Leaguers 16 8 Hot Shots B'. ISW Helms 1/ ir<3 r-t < JU

• « * BOWLINO BELLES

W L W L Plantation 45 21 HI. Floor 78^37'V L«S*lle P * H 43 23 Maoeddlnos 26 40 Nlaoara F.B. 43 23 C. 8. Buter* 34 42 AlclKfi 3 1 W " • ' • r y s 23 43

e • • LADIES INDUSTRIAL

W L W L Greet Lakes 51 ISMoore Buflelo 33 33 Hooker 48 ISMoore HI 2 27 39 Kimberly 45 21 I. G. E. 25 41 Moore Mil 42"»23'^ Nebtsco 24 39 DuPont 39 27 Eleh. AA 2 3 ^ 4 2 \ * Carborundum 35 3'

Sponsored by Marine Tredet AssoxleNon o» Western New York, Inc.

NIAOARA FRONTIER C.C.

Aces Birdies Spoons Drivers Stymies Booevs Pers

LeSalle C Rockets 7 Up

W L W L 34">22\'i Chip Shots 28 29 34\>22V> Divots 28 29

33 24 Deuces A 26 31 33 24 WeOsei * 25 32

29 ' / i 27^ H m r d i 24'/>32'^ 28W28Vi Putters 23V»33^

28 29 Eagles .23 34

BLACK HORSE W L- - W - L

53V>30Vi Eiffel T. 43^40^ 49 35 Macks P. 40V*43V* 46 38 Five Dots 19V464V*

" L

s j

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Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069

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