COE NS i ee 4, 1065. | ® The Guarfien, Oharlottatown, Wed. Nov. | SPORTS FRONT What Comes !nThe Future ls Question For Chuvalo - By JERRY GLADMAN It was Chuvalo's two-fisted York fans had little effect here |I told you to take the fight te TORONTO (CP)—Where now aggressive style, featuring a Monday night against the 26- Detroit, But you wouldn't lis. |for George Chuvalo? ceaseless body attack, and de- year-old Terrell, whose left jab ten. e This appears to be the main | termination that won praise played a tattog om Chuvalo’s ‘‘You won,” retorted the man- question posed by Canadian ‘from New York fight fans and features. : ager. “Everybody knows it but boxing fans following the Cana- boxing writers. The Canadian fighter had little ‘the judges and the referee.” dian champion’s unsuccessful! Harry Markson, boxing pro- success in under Ter- Ungerman said the loss “cost bid to capture the World Boxing moter at the garden, attested to rell's jab for most of the ni~ht our boy a cool million.” He was Association cham- | this. and, when he did, Torey deftly referring to the money Chuvalo Le Aeon coe and at Sed nc ee eg ee, tet "It's obvious the Sound deel. (%#,i2 New York as soon as he's | Witle Soe Sateen of oetide| Chuvalo aed Ungs sion won by Terrell mocked the (f00t04,, @.84 we'll pack the [experts ead wellers at Kegs) Coavee on ree Se tennaia eheees noenes the house,” Markson told the Tor- | 48reed with unanimous > over for hours the “muddled” title picture for the (ome, Telegram Tuesday. “His |clllon, the Chuvalo comp Tehe: (fight. dene teolne of a or the 'fights against Jones and Patter. ™ently accused als © REFUSE TO QUIT Phe six-foot-six ‘Terretl wil} /008.:; - were the best in many |“Tobbing” them. Right now we have made no await the outcome of a 15-round | 7°™* and Chuvalo rates as a In a heated verbal battle be- plans for the future, but neither caakan Meese Pea “Clay |! favorite with New York peo- anes sient doors, Chuvalo/of us is quitting,” said Unger- of hoe iple. : amed manager, man, vedi far a. - sas “There are big pay’ days in Ungerman, for making the on. the other baad, Terrell is ting a bout with the winner. |Cbuvalo’s future. And I hope his ™atch in hemges oh ar a as ware 20. This would clear up the ‘‘eon-| 2€*t one is in New York.” at 7 Pa Pour and br eaten es - fused” heavyweight champion wap LITTLE EFFECT “They ‘won't let me win. I|WBA, but the paying ’ ¢ | A Terrell Won? Dream Along... By CHRIS ANNETT “I can expect a bad decision anywhere else but not in my . Own home town" were the words spat out bitterly by Canadian heavyweight b xing champion George Chuvalo after last even- ing's ‘catch me if you can’ contest with WBA champ Ernie ¢ Terrell and he had plenty of reason to be mouthing. The standard of judging at the Maple Leaf Gardens must have hit a record last evening. Granted that Terrell was the defending champ and that he should have heen awarded some points for his tactics but without a doubt in my mind Chuvalo had by far the better of the match. The fight was scored on a five point per round basis. The winner of any round automatically received five points, and the loser could be awarded from zero to four, depending upon the showing he made in the round. At least the judges were equally bad in that they all con- descended to give Chuvalo the same number of points, but im my opinion enly one of the three came close to giving a true Picture of the fight. Billie Burke gave seven rounds to: Terrell, five to Chuvalo and called three draws. Now, these three rounds we Rssessment of the bout. . However the other two decisions bordered on the ridicu- fous. Referee Sammy Luftspring and judge Fred Norbert gave Terrell 73-65 and 72-65 nods respectively and when one considers that the most either boxer could have accumulated was 75 this point total has fo be utterly incredible. Reading down a blow by blow account of the fight which by the way is here in front of me, one cannot help but give at least five rounds to the Toron- tonian. and three more are questionable. Chuvalo was blocking ognize the Clay-Patterson clash | as for the heavyweight title. | Chuvalo? | It's conceivable he might! work his way back into the title jscene, but that won't be for at least another year—if at all. In suis Keeps Lindsay From Wings jmight find that a series of bouts) TORONTO \CP)—A rule con-;That's when he went on the|I have the right to say no and cerning voluntary retirement in| voluntary retired list. ‘it won't cost me a cent.” of Los Angeles at the con- trols, the streamlined car set @ record of 555 miles per hour on a twoway run through’ the the mile on the first run, re- corded at 544 m.p.h. On the return run it hit 566 AP Wirephoto) like a monster on the Moon as it hurtles at more than 500 miles per hour across the salt flats of Western Utah on the Closed Circuit TV System : : . " ship situation that resulted after | ; ley’ a r° that were drawn are fairly tight decision but Chuvalo should . | But the aggressive style Chu- fight my guts out. For what? |looks to Clay as the have been awerded then solely for the*fact that he was both | 500 PLUS re ee of md used to win over the New To scramble for quarters again. ‘world champ. blocking Terrell’s left jab effectively as well as getting home a | ae Imateh’ with {, a return oot T r few cracks of his own. Nevertheless Billie decided to call the ‘ oi 4, s . : | armer ampion e eee ; a The jet-powered “Spirit of way to a new world land speed measured mile. This picture [Sonny Liston. s rounds draws and one must give him some credit for his 69-65 =. NC el PORE appears record. With Craig Breadlove was snapped as car entered | The WBA has refused to rec- oO i inta ry efi rel i } er it t f e TIE ES ARNE ETRE NP A tt Pa the greater portion of Terrell’’s jabs (left) and there were only lin Eur c vi Z from ten to twelve rights thrown by the champ in the whole with a a ie ie the Nati Hockey League is| Now he's changed his mind, Lindsay attended e+ match. ’ : e |LIKED IN NEW YORK keeping veteran Ted Lindsay | but must git out a calendar year jtraining camp this fall, report : And there is still Madison |from rejoining Detroit Red | because he went on the list. | edly to stay in shape, and TERRELL SHOOTS OFF oes Oo raw a a Cl Square Garden where Chuvalo | Wings. Lindsay said he was asked by | nas. skated by himself. . won the hearts of New Yorkers} Lindsay sevesied in gu ioter. | Datealt coach Sid Abel to play| He yas optimistic that 7 ; with a pair of. rousing bouts | @® interview with the Gl and | again. ; president rence Campbell of ian ee Tene heme eer the ae See | By THE CANADIAN PRESS ($5. Winnipeg also had seats at |gate receipts estimated at $4,- against Doug Jones and Patter. |Mail from his Detroit home he| “I had no idea I'd think of | Montreal will help him get back thought Chuvalo would fight that way. I thought he was sve | About 25,000 fans across Can- $3 and $4 for a gate estimated 950 as 900-paid their way into son. He stopped Jones in 11| Wanted to return to the Red | playing again and I didn't think|intoaction even though the twe epectable fighter”. Who in hell is he to talk the match was |ada paid an estimated $85,000 between $10,000 and $15,000. [the 1,400-seat theatre. Edmon- jrounds last October and lost g| Wings, with whom he’ played |Sid would want me,” said Lind-/have clashed in previous sea stopped in the eighth round so that referee Luftspring could |to see the World Boxing Asso- MONTREAL DREW 2,600 ton produced an estimated | 12 - round decision to Patterson |last season after four years of pa it ih the ‘at Maal warn Terrell about thumbing and Chuvalo about butting in re ciation heavyweight title fight Montreal drew the second |$5,000 in gate receipts, a crowd four months later. retirement from the NHL. his D = i he |,.22 Montreal, NHL president taliation. How else did Chuvalo get those cuts on his face, between George Chuvalo and largest crowd, 2,600 in the 6,000- of 1,100 in the 4,500-seat Edmon- ae eee “Td love to play if they can Clarence Campbell said the rule Surely not from the light left jab that Terrell could muster. Ernie Terrell on closed-circuit seat Paul Sauve Sports Centre ton Gardens paying $4 to cl U G a year. | vind way ef cotiling this,” concerning the voluntary retired Chuvalo staggered Terrell a couple of times during the fight television Monday night. foe 8 gate ot Se. ee eee | ee in p Up mee ty Gat oe akee (Lindsay a “1 discusced 1 | iat “lis the same rule that has including the fourteenth and fifteenth rounds but Terrell. ever The fight, which attracted a gate receipts were unavailable| But Sherbrooke, Que, had | something,” he said. ‘I asked aaa ° 4 beeen in effect for at least 20 the sharcie, had ar aa a ly he had cramps crowd of 12,500 at Maple Leaf jin Quebec City, which had the jonly 295 in the 1,600-seat theatre | Criticizes BBC to be placed on the voluntary my eres, aon years. No words. have been a ta eet Oe Chants Dak an See ee thts. Gardens in Toronto, was won |third biggest crowd, about 2,000 there. Admission was $4.50. | retired: Uist leet “sbeten Decesse:| wuderstonding - 5 | ‘changed in it at all.” caused his knees to buckle. A real cutie. by Terrell. The Chicago fighter at $3 to $6 a head. Promoters said they made’ LONDON (Réuters) — The |! Was afraid some team might | agreeat me playing “Campbell said Lindsay was However the fight is over and nothing can be done about (scored a one - sided decision | About 1,500 turned up at the about $400. BBC was accused Tuesday of |@raft me and I nig >-weuldes | seme “very anxious’ about making the result except to pit Terrell against Cassius Clay. Now this Ver 15 rounds to retain his /2,500-sect Ottawa Coliseum and) Terrell's purse was either @) sneaking up on sex, presenting |TeP0t. oe aid “ike the WAVED BY OLURS ined tat encase es fight should be a real dilly with Terrell having only one weapon, |¢Town against the Toronto chal- paid an estimated $6,600. Atten-|guaranteéd $45,000 or 35 per | almost pornographic material suspension t Lindsay was waived by all retired list because he didn't a left jab. T imagine that after Clay has finished with nim |lenger. dance in Kingston was 1,462 atjcent of the live gate and & tin’ the guise «culture and ed |idea of spending the/rest of my| ovat. win fe league last |¥2nt to play for another team. Terrell won't even be able to croon for his rock and roll | Closed-circolt TV of the fight |the 3,Sl¢-geat Meenorial Centre |shareof_the TV revenue. which | ucetion. Leagee's Coed Nit | year and although they can't|, The NHL president said, the tos Hanvouaions SrUP, was shown in theatres and for a gate of $5,796. In St. |ever was greater. His share of| Health inister Kenneth Rob-|L2aue’s suspended claim him now, any ‘of them|/eft winger must sit out “one arenas in 2% Canadian centres. John’s, Nfld., the crowd wasithe live gate worked out to |inson received the complaint in| Lindsay, a 40 - year old left | oF revent him from being |C@lendar year—365 days” unless Cable television carried it to |1,400 with an estimated gate of |about $43,500. ‘a letter by the Clean Up TV| Winger, Played 18 seasons with ore tee active list by (all other clubs in the NEIL agree ifive centres in Western Can- $4,000. Attendance was 1,340 in Chuvalo was also guaranteed | Campaign, a vocal group led by | Detroit until being traded to eeu vetoing the move to let him play. | lada. Estimated capacity was |the 4,478-seat Stampede Corral |#45,000 or 2 per cent of the live | housewife Mary . Chicago Black Hawks in the 62,000. : in Calgary. There was no esti-|gate and.a share of the fele-| Mes Whitehouse said the let- |195758 season,.He played three| Punch Imlaech, manager \ The ‘crowd was approximately |mate of the gate there, but vision returns. The Canadian’s|tr asked the minister to win |St2%0s with Chicago and re coach of Toronto Maple Leafs, HOCKEY : ee one-third of capacity and the |seats went at $4 and $5. ‘share of the live gate came to/BRC support for an appeal by | ired worker said in Toronto that he won't! ¢. 14, ls will. hold . : TV gate fell considerably short | North Bay, Ont., reported- approximately $31,000. |@ top government medical offi ee ice |Jet Lindsay rejoin the Wings. first eee ae Ccaamir of von promoters. were hoping | : ~ for ‘‘an on og Ont., ended four years of sail “The heck with him,” Imlach |5.50 and any person wishing te e f) |The live gate of $124,456.20 {n l e003 a problem aes tirement to rejoin Detroit last | said. ‘I remember a few stories |try out for the team are asked ae We ee oa { big oy has | 208300 and he surprised the ex- | where Lindsay made it quite |to be in attendance. The Royal's }Toronte was short of pre Ee §S i S ‘a Ee —o bag wl added : Selaoee perts by scoring 14 goals. \clear that he wouldn’t come tojwill play in Maritime Senior A HOLMAN ISLAND, N.W.T. | the last few years. He was |$190,000. 10 6 EE ee ee a ee eee ea ener REE ee oe Cone. sone. (CP)—One of the strangest | posted elsewhere this sum- | The fight was also shown on ° sponge to public demand, but |*2tsfied with his efforts and golf courses in Canada has to | mer and Joss is hoping his closed-circuit TV in 14 cities in| there is a developing trend | {Dat he was retiring once more. be the 18hole layout Bill | replacement also is a golfer. the United States, including pay | OS S oOo ies which is presenting near-port- : FORUM i oe Laeger bs aes eure little trouble TV in Hartford, Conn. | : graphic material under the | wit! s since Joss hit | | guise of culture and education, tlement off Amundsen Gulf. upon the idea of painting gic ie cg core MANCHESTER, England | back the bettors who'd eob |e in TheAmerican Way of Sex xd SEASON SKATING PASSES ! The S4year-old Hudson’s {| them a brilliant red with nail rvip ne : "280 (AP)—"'The winner and new | lected their odds. and Pie¢asee (recent : : Bay Company store manager | potish. rn. s ae ag Mave champion,” bellowed veteran Ri reporters the referee ex- | grams).” me NOTICE NOW AVAILABLE AT THE: admits with a grin that the | $ cs jAll - , «| Teferee Jim Mahoney as he | plained: : : FORUM OFFIC older Eskimos here “think ee dascear Ae eee Sie's dicted, revenue from oe raised the right hand of Nat! “I made a genuine mistake. | EARTH BOMBARDED 10% Discount E I'm a little crazy.” But the | played in 34 degrees below Cult - television would reach jag I thought I was grabbing | When the Persoid meteor! te al! students. small fry can be depended | zero But winds blowing off $420,000. At this, British middle- | Swift’s hand, and it was only |shower occurs about Aug. 11 of %es Men's & PRICE $4.00 upon to form a gallery wheM | the Arctic Ocean are a prob- |__With all but two of the Cana-| weight champ Wally Swift when the master of ceremo- jeach year, the earth is bom. |° Dow $ Roys’ Wear - Joss tees off for @ round. lem. When they act up, the dian cemtres reporting, the olutched his head and yelled mies made the announcement |barded with tons of material These passes make a wonderful gift at any time, A junior champion in. his | games are called. off. lclosed_ circuit attendance to at the ref, ‘you're crazy, I of the winner that I realized , Gt. George 8t. more especially now with Christmas approaching. native Scotland, Joss took | Ground rules include bare talled 23,008. Vancouver refused | won, my error.” “ 6 his golf clubs along when he | hands when hitting the pall to give attendance figures OF Looking @ little startled at __Callimg the reversed dect- ("Sanior” Passes for Chikdren up to 14 years eld) ~ was” first—posted~ to~Northera—|-and conceding —a~-putt--when—#ale__receipts. However, est f:.6¢ Jacobs went into.a quick Sion the strangest end to @ Canada in 1928. At such Arc- | the ball is within a club Mates placed the Vancouver Witte dance and waved to | fight in British boxing history, — en tic outposts as — Island, | length of the pin. 1 crowd at sont 1,200 in the! iis su ‘ = Express iaiee oik Q ; Bathurst Inlet a: Copper- To keep from losing his 5-200-seat auditorium there. Book ‘ t | “Tt was an astonis uee Co mine, he’s always managed te | putting skill, Joss has ak a The crowds ranged from 240 gj¢. ee eee | take for referee Mahoney, an ns unty play at least a few games | hole in the living room of his in the 6,000-seat Georges Vezina fi, vinites tater. when | A class official who has han- : each year. home. Here he spends hours Centre in Chicoutimi, Que., to both "ithets emai thar dled fights for the best part of ° ° A big problem ts finding op- | both summers and winters (4.067 in the 7,500-seat Winnipeg Gassing rooms, the referee | ears. It's all the more as r ressive onservative nents. Bush pilots and { practising putts. Arena. : called the battlers back into | (‘ulstins because Jacobs is a RCMP constables have been With warmer -weather and Sydney, N.S. reported the jh. ring | colored man, and Swift is ' . eajoled into playing rounds | the ice breakup, Joss puts ‘only sell-out, filling the 1,023- ages s x white and you would think it ; ; a efter they get over the initial | away his clubs for another- seat theatre there for gate re- | I'm sorry," he said. Swift | would be easy to tell white | : tem shock of being. invited onto | season. ceipts of $4,799. Ticket prices. is the winner, not Jacobs.” | from black. : f the ice for a game. “Winter golf has one big |were $4 and $5. Manchester's Belle Vue An Anglican missionary- advantage,’ observed Joss. Seats ranged in price from $2. Hall, scene. of the fight, "| gtationed here has been | “It leaves the summer open in Winnipeg to $7 in Montreal ¢échoed with the wails of the Joss’s regular partner - for | for fishing.” \with most seats going at $4 and bookmakers trying to call ever they occur. : oe ae PRET : nis sp ” ing from the minor pain of . Ores s J Su chronic cheumatoid arthritis, | | ohn rtees have enjoyed PROMPT benefits ; from this quick, ~—— method. | , Get af the coupon Denies Rumor 00 S OF ee LONDON (Reuters) — For- NIAGARA OF P.E.I. = mer world motor racing cham- 252 Kevt Street , \Pion John Surtees said Tuesday . Charlottetown, P.E.I. [feports suggesting he would be | even e Phone 894-6373 ing again by stmas | ‘ re were premature. é SOLTOee.. nove tantiine Eee ee Surtees, seriously injured in a | pend cas of “oe You can ge Camadian Grand Prix practice’ [0s ANGELES ‘AP)—Heavy- ee at Mosport, Ont., Sept. 24. told weight champion Cassius Clay NAME eee eens reporters he is making good pro- says he'll knock out Floyd Pat- ADoeess gress but it is not known when Jierson in their fight Nov. 22— Coes epee ead 2 Mar ait en - Prva oe and claimed he could fight five cry == . PROV. con: my “ opponents such-as Erni ing plans: until my doctors ad- nae night. = gc, nes vise_me_ that _I have made_a/_ Clay said he did not-—watch | complete recovery,” he said. ‘the closed - circuit telecast of oe — a fight in Tor- ° onto, in which Ernie Terrell Willie Shoemaker emgage defended his World ie Boxing Association champion- To Spell Longden ship title* against Conodies , 2 champion George Chuyalo. € LAUREL, Md. (AP)—Willie | ‘I didn’t see it, but I heard Shoemaker was named Tuesday jit was dull," clay said. A MacLean to= replace suspendet Johnny | “I'll fight five guys ‘like Ter-' ages Longden on Canada’s George jrell in the same ring in the Royal in the Washington, D.C., |same night.” he added. e ; |International at Laurel race} On his coming encounter with Wed N ‘ |course Nov. Il) Patterson, Clay said: ov r il _|_ Shoemaker was picked for the | ‘‘Patterson needs a good whip : oy e e e ; eke aon ani aaa ping. ee I'll just give him set 10 days for an ac- ia Punishment for seven J ‘ fies at Bay a ee a's ™ for all the bad | psp nicl CREF : vest er rs J n two previous Internationa’ ngs he’s been saying about Gi ‘ Spea ee ee M eda W dd ie starts, Shoemaker finished |me and then knock him out. - TEXACO FU n a s Z ninth in 1955 aboard in “A knockout in the first round | Home Heating Oil z of England and eighth th | would be too easy for him,” he | Warmth with worry all winter long! , Clem of the United States in |said during a brief stopover on | Gemures aac schedule so 7 Vi ORIA HALL . ‘ 958. this way to La | can never run short. Fuel Chief is the 1 } y s Vegas, Nev, | CT George Royal, a Canadian- |where he and Patterson clash. | eae A : |bred colt who captured the $60,| Clay and his entourage of 10 ae ene Ga pe tor Temes : 600 Caanadian Championship at re from his home in Mi-| fuel Chief today! : ; Toronto’s Woodbine race course |ami, Fla. The group included : 2 |last month, is owned by Ernest | Angelo Dundee, Clay's manager, Dial ; Local Entertainment Refreshments Py _|C. Hammond and Robert W. jwho said the champion was in ; : * |Hall of Vancouver. perfect condition. j 3 é ‘CLAY PROMISES WHI lide amine oom MOL unaito uae? Oe : S PPING into prominence at Santa Anita BUILD_TO LAST Rea champion Cas- Patterson “need Decl sod 18) Mise in the an| The best be | $e shat a che a “needs a good son “a lot of punishment for Hi ise in ol are ‘town Petroleum ; og displays: = whipping” in their tifle bout seven or eight rounds.” then Seni ae aa ae gee 2 4 perk at eneineeting ae P “Lid ek ee a conference , Sens ; ‘ ec ng for 4 milés princ ree . roducts aarte Cin » allelic SS tea while saying at Las Vegas, Nev., Nov. 22. | said he would knock him out., |9. 46 “5, crouches for the |branches, twigs, deel aan 203 Gt. G » oh Grinds ~ Inserted by Queens County P.C. Association Geel fecsoar’ champion Faoye Clay promised to give Patter- (AP Wirephoto) {stakes |mud. iia a